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Sd ae NRO ES Wowie dy: 


ct 


(1 Half time Redeliff 1; Legion 0. 


 “utes:Ken Appleton equalized with | 


Provincial Library) 1-31 


‘ 


a 


Volume 18 


Medicine Hat Team ‘Swimming Pool 
And Redcliff Draw) Sports Postponed, 


Legion and Brick ‘& Coal Each ; Will bé Held at the Pool) Next! 
Score ore Goal in Second Round | Wednesday ata 
of Bennett Shield Competition | ii 
be Apparently a large percentage 
Playing one of the fastest of Redcliff. citizens are more in- 
games of soccer seen at the Ath-| terested in boosting outside en- 
letie park this season, the Brick | terprises than in boosting their’! 
& Coal team and the Legion of) own or helping to make Redcliff 
Medicine Hat, met Tuesday night)» better place for our children} 
in the second round of the prov-/At any rate townspeople did not | 
incial playoffs in the Bennett|turn out in sufficient numbers 
Shield with the score standing} for the aquatic sports at the sw-| 


1 


11 when the whistle blew for|imming pool Wednesday evening | 
full time. jto make the evening a success. | 
A’splendid turn out of fans|As a result the committee found | 
pas noticeable. -Redcliff came! it necessary to cancel the prog- | 
in force, every available car from | ram and postpone the event until 
that town bringing down their next Wednesday evening. 
contingent. | When it is remembered what | 
The full 90 minutes of play ja blessing the swinning pool here | 
was packed with rea 1 football,/has meant to the young of the 
both teams displaying all they|town, almost everyone of whom 
had, and although there was/can now swim; and when it is 
so much at stake the game Was also remembered that the pool 
never marred by any unsports-|has kept children away from the 
manlike.tactices: The verdict | treacherous river which claimed | 
was very fair, the teams being | many lives before we had a pool, 
evenly matched. Taking thein- | all will agree that it would be a 
itiative at the kickoff, Redcliff|sadday indeed for Redcliff if| 
were the first to press. The|the committee should be compel- 
forwards were’ playing’ a nice |led to close the pool for lack of | 
passing game, the half backs well|the necessary financial suppoit 
up, covering their. play. W./to keep it going. Yet that is) 
Lawson and N, Willis tested Hall| just exactly what is liable to hap | 
in quick succession, but the goal-|pen unless the general public 
ie turned them nicely aside. show more interest in the under- | 
The Legion broke away, Rob-|taking, There are very few ways | 
inson placing nicely to the wing|in which the necessary funds 


| 
| 


McAuthur, tore down, centred|may be raised. One is by . par). 
to Appleton, who sent in a. hard|ents and well wishers buying | mand. 


one, that.Thomson saved at the|season tickets. Another is by 


“ empense of a.corner. The cor-|every citizen patronizing jevery.| next Monday to say by their vote 
ner kick did not materialize, Red-|movement staged-for the puprose | whethen they.want. the 


cliff cleared easily. Play was|of augmenting the funds. The 
confined for some time with end|aquatie Sports next Wednesday | 
to end rushes, with both defence | will be one of these. Its success 
featuring. . lor failure may have much to do | 
After 43 minutes of the game| with the carrying on of the pool. 
Redcliff was rewarded with the 


it out of Hall’s reach into the net 


Medicine Hat checked’ from 
the restart and within five min- 


one of the nicest goals seen scor- | 
ed at the park. Taking the ball. 
from centre field he worked -his 
way down, passed to McArthur | 
who sent it back, yetrieving he 
beat the backs and drove hard 
for the corner of thenet. From 
then until full time, battled hara. | 
Each custodian was repeatedly | 
called on, and sensational saves 
were pulled off. 
Lawson and Fairhurst were) 
strong on the defence. Applet- 
on was . outstanding for the 
Legion, Ken was fast, never flus- 
tered, and a continual worry 
to the opposition. forwards. Har- | 
vey was his usual steady self, a} 
great defence man. All players | 
were deserving a mention for 
each played and gave the best | 
they had... Hugh Goldie as ref- | 
eree did everything that was fair 
and his handling of the game was 
recieved with satisfaction by al! | 
The replay is called for Friday | 
night, | 


“Miss BE. Pinder and Miss” Cox 
are spending thier holidays in 
Banff. They took the air mail| 
plane Sunday morning, July 13th } 
from Medicine Hat to Calgary | 
where they stayed for a few days | 
and then went on to Banff, 

7 oe ” 
In the examination result pub- | 
lished last week the name of | 


f com) on jects. 
Graham Ellis was omitted. He | Aman the ertiets inal ul Alfred Heather, 


passed from Grade 6 to 7. te 


REDCLIFF REVIEW 


OUR SLOGAN: An Industrial Metropolis of Industrious People Whe Pull Together, 


fHE REDCLIFF REVIEW, THURSDAY, JULY 24th, 1930 


| opposite the name of the candid-}his trade as a brick layer. Before 


ment assumes full control for 
| asa °F Tuesday announcing the death! 
) putting it into effect and footing ‘of Charles Conroy at the 


jand the municipalities help pay About four years ago he suffered 


Gilbert and Hllivan, eighteenth century compositions | star; 


‘ Number 20 


Se 


Mark Your Ballots Robt. Messenger Died | Canada Ne nada Needs [Dai igures 
rk ts fer S airy Cattle Figures 
With an X This Time Suddenly in South New Men & New Method Speak for T hemselves 


| 


| Was Pioner of Redciff and Great | 


For the 


baa Dominion Election War Veteran. The governmer t at Ottawa are | By giving figures showing the 
which takes place next Monday ! ‘nothing more or less th t ‘number of cows in Canada each 
there are two candidates in the}, Announcment last Monday of BR gdb FR | year from 1921 till 1929 the Med 


r : s jadministrators of. yow business- 
field. G. M. Blackstock, is the the sudden death in Los Angeles |the business of ye ving ARRON 
siness avery Canadian 


Candidate for the Conservative | 6f Robert, Messenger a former | ,, . 

party and F. W. Gershaw for the citizen of this town, was auite| Durecviee 2 ge ar 

Liberals. The voting takes plac )A Shock to the old freinds of the | ima abd tai 

in Cliff Hall, and the poll will be deceased here, lr . 

open from 8 a. m, till 6 p. m. Deceased was one of the pion- ‘ies se Pisin decom 
In this election voters should eers of this town having come | tay, C 

mark their ballots with an X ‘here in the boom days to work at ‘ 


icine Hat News tries to make out 
“ | that the dairy industry has not 
‘ot suffered from the New Zealand 
: Treaty entered into by the Lib- 
your business is managed is att-|,..0) .. rage 
ged is ra ra pang geet ga 
“te | 1ave much effect on 
The farmers of Wes-|dairy farmers in Canada who 
afiada are primarily iater-|since the New Zealand treat 
jested in the successful market- | into effect, have f been a : 
ing of their wheat and the unem- | only abot take as much Pd aed 


seven : 
forget itis with an X NOT 1,/ year: , eaet ployment question - Are you sat- | butter fat and ‘ 

Lit is an X. »/years ago he was married to Mrs|icrieg withthe way these two atand cream as they 
2, as in the last provincial elect-, Cockrell who with their family | oreat ptoblems dons re a before it became. effective. 
ion. Let us see to it that therelgtill survive,. The late Mr. Mes-| § Solved’ Even taking. the figures sub- 


" iby the King Governm + CON- | mi 
are no spoiled ballots. Senger was A veteran of the great ditions as ia find than oor co ee nye gp 


» - oma eh . " 2 awear > 
war and after returning from} , certainty, provide the pa bn fewer cows in Canada in 
Conservatives Favor }France took a keen interest in|. No} [Seer weet ae 
Nati : ‘th Boy Scouts here of which he| WHAT OF THE BRITISH if only 25 tees 
ational Pensions was instructor in their physical | PREFERENCE? va nb ui ae , oe = 
f at time 


training. Let there be no misunderstand 

; been heifers the 

The stand taken by the Cont ms if 2 | ng The Conservative Party be- j been about a sotiten seect ot 
servative party in connection Former Redcli f Man pce in a British Preference - it| in Ganada in 1929 than in 1921 
with. eld ave pensions was is that ; believes too in preferencial trade} nst 

Edm stead of onl 

it should be a natural undertak-' Died at onton | Agreements with every part of theahied pablo “ 


iwg where the Dominion goverN=} word was received in isa ihe Empire and also with all nat-! the News Speak More plainly 


i 

lions. jghan the author anticipated. 

, ‘itish goods, it is too much to me 

of Providence, Edmonton. Déc- |ask that Britain give preference Mr. and Mrs. P, McDermott 

silatbe Gea: peovtichil econdlanesl > Babar for severa years employed | ,,, Canadian wheat as inst received sad news last Monday 
at the Dominion Glass plant here| a;ycentine wheat or other world|“"™°Uncing the sudden death of 

competitors of Canude, their daughter in the old country 


ate they wish to see elected. Dont leaving Redcliff six or 


1928 and only 41, 
|445 more in 1929-than im 1921, 


If Canada gives preference to 


the whole bill. House |, 


The Liberal party’s policy 


the pensions. This means that 


the time may come when it will el paps sn ngs "7 There is no disloyalty in that - | should 
be necessary for town and city}. of ae and unmarried with It is merely business! Without| Mr. and Mrs. R. R. Jamieson, 
councils to add another mill: tol” se anaghe mutuality of interest no prefer-|0f Castor, who were motoring 


no relatives in Canada. 
—-0-——_- ---—- > 


|ential agreement between. Can-|from Winnipeg stopped off here 
jada and any other part of the ee week end and were guests 


taxes in order to meet this de- 


Don’t overlook getting out to} Empire can stand 1 use the lot Meu: Hicks. 
cast your vote next Monday. If | Canadia * 


Ratepayers will have a chance : 
n people will tan 
our name has been inadvertent- | gor jt. " ———— 


ere re ae 


investment. For fifty years 


r . jeft-offthe-list. and _you have | A fit _ : SE 
government to foot the whole bill the qualifications you can appear } the nee Sutten piaite . pale a oa 
or take a chance on having 0/4: the polling booth and have| ‘The ree sori dee going to the States: ~ - 


pay more town taxes to make up 


ur vote cast. 
the town’s share of old age ae 


gee {bad - The Liberals insisted it was’ ericans are the worlds best spend 
; good. ers. Already the tourist traffic 


sions. asia . j 
s Ie your Sobwerigtion paid? |.) Who waasight?): “The dquet: brings to Cand yeasty” neat 


first'goal. From close in the Rene eee eee eo. Ph {ment is now to be cancelled. Why | $300,000,000. Canada’s third 
Son. dane rag oe ta Opera Season at Banff | Because it was not based on mut|industry. With a National 
going to W. Lawson who placed nd ut iapenant: Highway it will reach’ $500,000, , - - 


There will be an imperial Econ 000 as soon as a road is opened 
jomic Conference in London next} with feeders to the south to tap 
September. . Then is the fitting | that rich reservoir, 

baer to work out preferencial| 9. in.parliament Mr. Bennett 
| trade agreements not only with | Jeader of the Conservative party 
‘Great Britian but with the Em-| supported the completion of the 
[Sone a Hanna Branch line into Redcliff 
The British preference as con-|J¢ was when the Conservatives ° 
|tained in the Dunning Budget| were in power that the ©. N. R. 
\is merely an election dodge. Such | grade into Redcliff was built.The 
preference came into effect im-)|jberals have been in power for 
/mediatly on the passing of the! five years and nothing more has 
‘budget - Two months have ela i 

mon e P| been done to get the line com- 
| Sed - Plenty long enough to show jpleted. The completion of this 
[Srartagad ~ Compare the prices. of |jine would mean much to the in- 
July wheat f. 0. b. Fort William | dustries of Redcliff and their 
|on ‘May Ist last at $1.08 with the | employees, 

| price today. To beneficially ef-| 3. Improvement of marketing 
| tees the price of Canadian wheat! facilities by construction of the 
}in Bitain we must obtain a pref-|st. Lawrence deep Waterways 
erence there as against world) system as a Canadian undertak- 
competitors. This is the Con-|jng, This will give the farmer 


servative policy. an additional three cents on 
The Minister of Trade and com) every bushel of wheat. 


c {meree, Hon. Mr, Malcolm made} 4 


; Prompt improvement of 
the governments position unden- harbor facilities throughout Can 
\iably plain, When in answer to & | ada with special attention to the 
| question on the floor of the|fudson’s Bay Route require- 
| House on May 28th he said; | ments. 

| *:The Department of Trade} Mr, Bennett has Pledged Him- 


and Commerce is not exercised | self to Carry these Through, He 
lover the sale of such commodit-| will Keep His Word. 


|ies as wheat, because those com-| MR. KING’S PLEDGE 
| modities find their own markets | 


ALFRED HEATHER | 


MORE 
but we are interested in assist-| CONFERENCES 
‘ing the sale of manufactured | JUST 
' products.” WORDS 
Does such a stand meet with | WORDS 
| your approval ? | WORDS 


| UNEMPLOYMENT RELIEF | My. King, too, will keep his 


"Twice a week during ay oat pugest, the Light at Banff; Allan Burt, light baritone, formerly with BENNETT OR KING. WHICH? | ‘ 

Opera Com of Alf H has been|the Ameri Co} ; Beatri orson, | ’ ALT | p ‘ 4 

engaged to playrat the Banff Springs Motel A, sory contralto, ‘whe eee, ike Tas Bongars " ‘Pledge. . But of what avail 
variety of will produced i 


oo agg BE gars’ Opere’; | Mr. Bennett's Pledge: ‘1T IS TIME FOR A CHANGE 


owe, baritone, who made a hit |For Immediate Relief: ‘ | VOTE FOR BLACKSTOCK 


ters - in his derin, John the Buteher, in “H the | : oe 

2s dco oe eee ee James, pow Ba ee | en Bevin eae ad Our Conservative Candidate 
layed with success i uced at of a ation: ighwa rom | j 

Seaodion Pacific Festivals; Herbert. Mowbteen, tones} t to t “a . y al , The Redeliff Conservative Ass, 
thoag te be played| Amy Fleming, contralto, and Enid Gray, measo, | one coast. S18 a re j 


including | Jean Haig. 


f 
“ 


t. 


hi 


THE REVIEW, 


REDULIDE, ALBERTA 


oi You can buy Saladaquality : 
at three cups for a cent 


ng Al #AD AY 


‘Fresh from the gardens’ 


Keeping Pace With Progress 


Are we keeping pace with progress? 
Progress is an illusory thing. It may be seen, but so often is not} 
perceived. Like old age or a thief in the night, it creeps upon one| 
unawares and suddenly one awakens to realization that some profound | 
change has taken place, an evolution has occurred. We have not been aware 
of the fact because,of its apparent insiduousness—because its movement 
towards and past us has been gradual. We have seen it unconsciously but it 
has been too close to us for observation. 

Yet despite this seeming slow approach the thing that we call progress 
moves with great rapidity, but it moves continually, inexorably, a step at a 
time, but never halting. It is an onward march that never tires, never 
falters. ‘ ‘ 

! The only way to correctly gauge progress is in retrospect. Look back 

a few years, only a decade or so, and the remarkable progress which 
‘civilization makes in the course of a brief span suddenly becomes apparent 
with startling clarity. Yet we do not see these“extraordinary and far reach- 
‘ing changes in the making although ‘they are going on all the time. 

Turn over the leaves of the family album and immediately the truth of 
the assertion stares one in the face.. What an extraordinary change in style 


| 


Why Anglo-Egyptian a 
Negotiations Failed 


Britain Could Not Meet Demand For 
Immigration Into Sudan 


A white paper published disclosed 
that the breakdown in Anglo-Egyp- 
tian negotiations which terminated in | 
London, May 8, was due to the im- 
possibility of finding any formula 
| which would satisfy the Egyptian de- 
mand for unrestricted immigration of 
Egyptian nationals into the Sudan, 

The document shows that little 
dificulty was experienced ih nego-| 
tiations on. most points, although | 
there were long discussions regarding | 
the defence of the Suez Canal. | 

At first the Egyptians demanded | 
that the British troops should all be | 
concentrated on the east bank of the | 
canal. They subsequently agreed to 
the British stipulation for troops to 
the west of the canal but no agree- 
ment could be reached on the Sudan 
question. | 


WAS RUN DOWN 
NOW WELL AGAIN 


Takes Pleasure In Recommend- 
ing Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills 


To the woman in the home illness 
is almost a calamity. Many @ woman 
keeps on with her household duties 
when she is feeling ready to drop. 
Her head aches, she is easily tired, 
is depressed and nervous and has no 
appetite. In a word she is anaemic 


of Cress, in shape of headgear, in fashion of hair dressing in a few years. It 
appears incredible that one really looked like that 20, 15 or even ten years | 
ago. : ‘ | 
3ut pregress does not mark’ a changing: trend in dress alone. It invades | 
every realm of activity within the ken of human experience, In the whole 
fiel] of things material and in the entire mental and even spiritual arena, a} 
steady and unrelenting advance is being made. | 

Hark back but twenty years and compare the means of transportation’ 
of that time with the swift cabin mcnoplane and upholstered limousine of | 
today. Contrast the crude telephone of a generation ago with the automatic | 
and, the radio of the present time. 


| strength and energy to weak, de- 


and badly needs help —.the health- 
help that only Dr. Williams’ Pink 
Pills can give her. These pills make 
rich, red blood which brings new 


spondent sufferers. Concerning them, | 
Mrs. Paul Rail, Coin du Blanc, Que., | 
says: “I .was badly run-down, slept | 
poorly, and awoke as tired as when 
I went to bed, My appetite was poor | 
and I felt miserable. I took six) 
boxes of Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills and 


A pain in the lower part of your 
back can torture you. But not for 
long, if you know about Aspitin! 
These harmless, pleasant tablets 
take away the misery of lumbago, 
rheumatism, neuralgia, headaches, 
toothaches, and systemic pains of 
women, Relief comes promptly; is 
complete. Genuine Aspirin cannot 
depress the heart. Look for the 
Bayer cross, thus: 


Artistic Booklet Issued By CPR. 


Great Help To Traveller Planning An 
Overseas Holiday 


A pleasing series of glimpses of 
“Those Magic Isles,” embracing Eng- 
land, Wales, Scotland and Ireland, is 
contained in an artistic booklet under 
that title, just issued by the London 


| offices of the Canadian Pacific Rail- 


way. 

Replete with a wealth of artistic 
photographic illustrations, the pub- 
lication forms one of the most com- 
plete guides ‘to the Old Country 
which has appeared in recent times. 
All aspects of the life of each coun- 
try are dealt with, both in picture 
and story, from the teeming hub of 
Empire itself along the leafy lanes 
and hedgerows of England to the 
rugged shores of Wales and the 
mighty moors of Scotland. Ireland, 
both the Free States and the North, 
is also given considerable space, while 
rural scenes and graphic descriptions 


lnvestments Aleny the ois 
National Show Increase 


Over Seventy-Four Million Involved 
In Establishing Industrial Plants 
New industrial plants established 

along the lines of the Canadian Na- 

tional Railways, in 1929, involved a 

total capital investment by the indus- 

tries of $74,106,10, according to the 
annual report of William Phillips, 
manager of the ‘Industrial Depart- 
ment of the system. This was an in- 
crease of $696,300 over the previous 
year, when the expenditure was $73,- 
409,800. Additions to plants already 
existing represent an investment of 
$33,361,000, an increase of $8,792,200 
over 1928. On the Grand Trunk West- 
ern lines of the system, the capital 
investment by industry for new 
plants and branches totalled $11,729,- 

000. While this was a decrease of 

$7,500,400, there was an increase of 

$2,227,000 in additions to plants, the 
total being $11,563,000. 

Canadian development from Atlan- 
tice to Pacific, Mr. Phillips indicates, 
was in many fields, involving such 
industries as: newsprint, cold storage, 
warehousing, grain elevators, silk 
mills, canning plants. foundries, dis- 
tilleries, automobile plants, lumber- 
ing and mining industries. The most 
outstanding developments. in West- 
ern Canada were in mining in Mant- 
toba, and in cold storage plants in 
British Columbia. The Hudson Bay 
Mining and Smelting Company, and 
the Sherritt-Gordon Mines, Ltd.,’ at 
Flin Flon, and Sherridon, expended 
$10,000,000, while two cold storage 
plants, costing more than $3,000,000, 
were established at New Westminster 
and Victoria, B.C. New elevators in 
the west represented an investment 
of $1,345,600 and new oil warehouses, 
$482,000. 


Lesson Never Learned 


Yo will sleep more payee, A p= 
ever before in your cosy Third 


Class stateroom on a Canadian 
ship. * Soft mattresses, spot- 

less linen, warm blankets, feather 
lows, etna ee clean towels, 


e388 everyn 
and trained stewards to 
‘wait on you, 
All this is part of Third Class service 
on this famous Line. This service 
means that you eat, sleep and play 
as younever did before, on the voyage 
over and back. 


ddideia et es 
: 


Makesure are toenjoy the 
trip by Cunard to the Old 
Country. ; 

Bookthrough The Cunard Line,270 Moin 


Street, (Tel. 26841-2), or Huron and Erie 
Balding, Portore Ave., Winnipeg; (Tel. 
21-007), or any steamship Agent. 


Weekly Gallinge to Ply- 

esd mouth, Havre, London, 
Belfast, Liverpool and 

_ Glasgow, in eonjunction 
with the Anchor-Donaid- 


CUNARD 


~o™ CANADIAN SERVICE 
om 


Cabin, Tourist Third Oabin and Third Clase 


Appraise the difference between the they completely renewed my health,” 


= 


_s| Let’s Go Fishing 


ire rairi . 1 fgh lon Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills are sold 
mired prairie trail of yesteryear with the broad gravelled highway along by all inedicing dasiars oF. by. mall at 
|50 cents a box from The Dr. Wil- 


which we roll now. 


A little reflection shows that everything with which we come in contact, | jiams’ Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. 


everything we experience, everythihg we do has been subject to just as_ 
emarkable an evolution as those things to which specific reference has been | 
made. Not only has progress made radical changes in what we wear and how 
we travel in a few short years, but it has wrought a similar transformation 
in what we eat and drink, in our amusements, in our work, in our social life, | 
in our worship and even in what we think. | 


———- 


New Flags For Old » 


| Fifteen Nations Have Made Change 


Since World War 


In no sphere of activity, however, has this evolution been more marked | 
in recent years as in the field of daily work, in the realm of business, in city | 
and country. In methods of production, in modes of distribution, in processes | 
of marketing changes have revolutionized and are continuing to revolution- | 
ize the daily life of the individual. These changes are so pronounced and 80) 


rapid that they are apparent even to the most careless onlooker, | 
A writer in a popular magazine recently pointed out that such swift 


Fifteen nations, containing more 
than one-third of the world’s popula- 
tion, are living under new flags since | 
the World War. In addition a new | 
flag of red, white and green is now | 
flying in India, with its 300,000,000 | 
people, where Gandhi's revolutionists | 


of popular resorts are not wanting. 

To the traveller contemplating a 
holiday overseas it is an alluring 
foretaste of what is to come; to the 
returned voyager, it is a pleasing sou- 
venir and an inducement to repeat 
the journey. 

The “St. Lawrence Water Boule- 
vard to Europe” is used yearly by 
hundreds of thousands of travellers 
in Canadian Pacific Steamships, well 
worthy of their “Empress” and 
“Duchess” nomenclatures. 


Breaks Previous Record 


changes are being made in the conduct of business and commerce that heads | have proclaimed independence of Aerial Photographic Expert “Shoots” 


| 
‘of business houses are finding it increasingly difficult to secure young men | 


competent to engage in commercial life without first being re-trained after.| 
they have left'college. The almost daily application of new scientific discov- | 
eries in the field of ‘business results in the college student being out of date} 
because the course, though designed for the particular vocation he intends 
to’ follow, has not kept pace with the changes taking place in the practical 
arena. . 

This evolutionary process is going on in the whole industrial field, agri- | 
culture included, but as was stated at the outset it is not always so easy to 
perceive it because of its constancy and its proximity. . 

For this reason it is- perhaps a wise thing, nay, a necessary thing to 
sometimes pause and look back a little, make a few comparisons with the 
past, and in the light of these contrasts a clearer perspective may be gained 
of what is happening from day to day, and perhaps even an inkling may be 
secured of what may be expected in future. 

Only by doing this can we secure the necessary vision to enable us to 
keep pace with. progress, 

Idea Did Not Work 
Berlin Courts Fined Man For Fight- 
ing Noise With Noise 


For trying.to conquer the noise pro- 


Large Quantity Of Fruits and Veget- 
ables Imported Last Year 


“The rise in exports of fruits and 


| be universally identified today. 


Great Britain. In fact since the. 
change of colors by Russia, Germany, ' 
China and other great political divis- 
ions the probability is that not more | 
than four flags of major nations can 


Attacked By Asthma. .The first 
fearful sensation is of suffocation, 
which hour by. hour becomes more 
desperate and hopeless. To such a 
case the relief afforded by Dr. J. D. 
Kellogg’s Asthma Remedy seems 
nothing less than miraculous. Its 
help is quickly apparent and soon the 
dreadful attack is mastered. The 


Mount Rainier 270 Miles Away 
Capt. A. W. Stevens, Air Corps 


| photographic expert, has broken his 


own record for long-distance aerial 


| photography, “shooting” Mt. Rainier 


from a distance of 270 miles, 

This feat adds almost 50 miles to 
the record established by Captain 
Stevens last year, when his camera 
registered objects 227 miles distant. 
The new photograph was made while 
in flight 20,000 feet above Crater 
Lake, in Oregon, and gives a clear 
picture of various mountain ranges 


asthmatic who has found out the de-| stretching northward to the lofty 
pendability of this sterling remedy | peak of Mt..Rainier, 14,000 feet above 


will never be without it. It is sold 
everywhere. 


Engineer Will Survey Mines 


Govenment Official To Visit 
Important Centres During 
Season 


the sea, 

When the picture was taken the 
thermometer on the ‘plane, which was 
piloted by Lieut. John Corkille, stood 
at 20 below zero. A liquid oxygen 
supply was carried. 

“Shooting at Mt. Rainier from a 
distance greater than that between 


Making Plants Luminous 


Reckless Drivers Take Chances In 
Spite Of Dally Accidents 

Does it pay to drive recklessly on | German Gardener Demonstrates Ex- 
the highway? The answer is simple.| Periment At Berlin Flower Show 
Nevertheless we need to be impres-| It is stated that a German garden- 
sed now and again with the fool- | er has discovered a plan for injecting 
hardiness of throwing caution to the ' phosphorous into plants, thus making 
winds and performing menacing | them luminous at night. The experi- 


duced by his neighbor on the floor 
above by a still more deafening noise, 
Walter Houser, a lodger in an apart- 


arraigned in court, 

He stretched a violin string across 
his reom immediately beneath the 
ceiling, and He belabored it several 
hours daily with a bow while stand- 


vegetables from Bermuda to Can- 
jada last year was from zero to 


and three times that amount next 
year,” according to Hon. 8S. 8. 


| Agriculture, of Bermuda, who was a 
| recent visitor. Mr, Sparling conferred 


| 50,000 cases; one hundred thousand) 


ment house of a Berlin suburb, was | cases is the estimate for this year) 


Sparling, chairman of the Board of) 


Hon. Charles Stewart, Minister of | Wew York City and Washington is 
| the Interior, has announced that Su-| much like shooting at the moon with 
| pervisory Mining Engineer C. C. Ross | the difference that you can see the 
was leaving for Fort Smith. Mr, Ross moon,” says Captain Stevens. “The 
will visit all the important centres of principal task is to aim the camera 
| mining activity throughout the sea-| in the general direction you believe 
son. He will organize the work of the your objective to be, snap the trigger 


ing on a stepladder. He then screwed with officials of the Canadian Nation- 
several hooks into the ceiling, from. al steamships in regard to the Can-| 
whick he hung his vacuum cleaner in | ada-West Indies service. 

‘he inverted position, “The Canadian budget will. be of 
The court sentenced the ingeni-| great benefit to Bermuda,” he said, 
ous noise producer to a fine of*200| “since it permits the free entry of | 
marks and cost of the repair of the, vegetables into Canada during the, 
dumaged apartment. | winter months.” : 
How He Saw It 
Being told to write a brief essay 
on “The Mule," young Gregory | 
compiled the .following—‘“The mew] 
is a hardier bird than the guse or 
the turkie, It has two legs to walk 
with, two more to kick with, and 
wears its wings on the side of its 
Head. It is stubbornly backward | 

about coming forward.” 


Spare the children from suffering 
|\from worms by using Miller’s Worm 
Powders, a most effective vermifuge 
with which to combat these insidious | 
foes of the young and helpless. It is 
an excellent worm destroyer, and 
when its qualities become known in| 
a household no other will be used. | 
The medicine acts by itself, requiring 
no purgative to assist it, and so thor- 
oughly that nothing more is desired, 


The Latest Convenience 
Boxes for the mailing of letters are 
to be installed on busses running 
through rural districts in Ireland. 
They first will be tried on four lines | 
terminating at Belfast, where the | 
boxes will be cleared and the mail 


|handled through the Belfast post 
| office. 


But not forget to take Minard’s 
along. It will take care of 
| cuts, bruises or mosquito bites, 


Manufacturing On Prairies 
Prairie Province manufactures in 
1929, had a value of $340,000,000 ac- 
edrding to C. EB. Harvey; of Winnt- 
peg, retiring chairman of the prairie 
division of the Canadian Manufactur- 
ers’ Association. ; 


| during his long life. 


office and the field parties and endea- | anq hope for luck.” 
the 


vor to ascertain the needs of 


prospectors and companies, Mr. 


Ross will then be in a position to ad- } )\, 
vise the Minister of the Interior fully | valuable’ in cases of croup, sore 
}on all that appertains to the future 
| of the industry. | 


Plants Large Forest Area 


A forest in the embryo—250 acres 
of it—has been planted by the Sas- 
katchewan forestry service, in the 
Prince Albert region. H. P. Eisler, 
forestry engineer, stated that the 
transplanting of 2,000,000 nursery 
seedlings and stock is the largest | 
such programme in the ‘province's 
history. Most of the seedlings are | 
jack and white pine. 


John D. Rockefeller has spent more 
than $750,000,000 in benefactions 


London's statue to Marshall Foch | 
is to be unveiled in May. 


CORNS 


Stop Ac ‘hing-Drop0pf 


Esk 
PUTNAM S 
Corn Extractor 


Riengian Egyptian Liniment re- 
ves toothache and neuralgia. In- 


throat and quinsy. Keep a bottle 
handy. 
The Practical Way 

They have a practical way of do- 
ing things in the west, says the To- 
ronto Globe. For instance, the Sas- 
katchewan Department of Agricul- 
ture has bought a farm “absolutely 
polluted with weeds,” and will pro- 
ceed to make it blossom as the rose. 
-A demonstration of this kind will be 
worth a thousand lectures on the best 
way to get rid of noxious growths on 
the farm. 


Wise mothers who know the vir- 
tues of Mother Graves’ Worm Exter- 
minator always. have it at hand, be- 
cause it proves its value. 


Increase In Grape Growing 

The development in grape growing 
by J. W. Hughes, of Kelowna, fur- 
nishes some interesting data. In 1927, 
he had 500 baskets, in 1928, 2,500 
baskets, in 1929, 20,000, and this year 
he expects 40,000, 
ing $100 a ton for “concords.” 

France expects much larger crop 
yields this year than last, ~ 


Minard’s for Falling Hair, 


A winery is offer- 


tactics such as cutting in on the car’ 
ahead, ignoring danger signals and 
sO on. 

Some time ago a lady motorist 
driving on the Hamilton-St. Cathar- 
ines highway, in Ontario, committed 
one of those rash acts. She cut in on 
another car and caused a heap of 
trouble. As a result of her poor judg- 
ment or whatetver it was, three cars 
were damaged, . four people injured 
and three lawsuits followed, culmin- 
ating in a judgment of $4,650 to be 
paid to seven persons in adjustments. 

What a risk and price to pay for 
gaining a few car lengths! Was her 
time as precious as all that? 


Minard’s for Insect Bites. 


Maps For Many Purposes 

The Topographical Survey, Depart- 
ment of the Interior, is an organiza- 
ntio of the Dominion Government 
which is éngaged in making maps 
for many purposes. So far as practic- 
able standardized sheets are used, the 
scale varying according to the in- 
formation available and the purpose 
for which the map is intended. ; 


ment was demonstrated at the Ber- 
lin Flower Show, when a large num- 
ber of cacti, of all shapes and sizes 
were inoculated, and that, as the lu- 
minous quality concentrates in the 
spines, they appeared to be dotted 
with brilliant points of light that ra- 
diate in the darkness like glow- 
worms. 


It isn’t usually necessity that is the 
mother of convention. It’s the desire 
to have a trip and a good time. 


ZIG-ZAG 


Cigarette Papers 


ble Book 


t You Can Buy/ 
D IMITATIONS 


Fines: 
AVO! 


“NERVES ALL SHOT 
id sas Aired 


Cut Down 
Food Wastage 


---by covering all perishable 
goods with Para-Sani Heavy 


Waxed Paper. 


Para-Sani 


moisture-proof texture will keep 


them fresh until 
to use them, 


Il you are ready 


You'll find the Para-Sani sanitary 


knife-edged car 


ton handy, Or 


use “Centre Pull” Packs in sheet 
form for less exacting uses. At 
grocers, druggists, stationers, 


Western. Representatives: 
HUNTER-MARTIN & CO,, REGINA, SASK. 


Canada Is 
Being Careful 


We are, in other words, hand-picking | 
the people who are going to have the 
privilege of living im this fair land | 
of ours. } 

So you see immigration is “Prim- | 


Require Mineral Matter 


Lack Of It In Feed Is Serious 
Impediment To Growing Pigs 


A problem in the mineral supply 


CHIEF OF STAFF, SALVATION | History Dates Back 
ARMY, VISITING CANADA 


Twelve Hundred Years | 


Irish Hermits First Inhabited Iceland | 


France Has Big : 
Air Program 


All Immigrants Must. Pass  Medlical | arily” a health problem. Canada sees | 


In 796 
Examination Before Being 


Would Cover Half the World With 


a 


‘ tion is rather difficult to handle, as 


Admitted | 
We are accustomed to thinking of | 
immigration as a sociological and | 
economic problem. Seldom do we 
realize that it is primarily a problem | 
of social hygiene—-a problem of the 
physical, mental and moral health of 
our country. 


It is obvious that the population of | 
Canada can only grow in two ways— | 


first, by the natural increase provid- 
ed by native births. And second, 
through immigration. Generally 
speaking there is little danger that 
native Canadians will fail to absorb 
Canadian ideals, and receive Cana- 
dian training. Our educational system 
takes care of that. But our educa- 
tional system does not take care of 
the adult immigrant—the stranger 
within our gates who intends to be- 
come our adopted brother. 


And because there are all kinds of 


people in the world, we have to be | 


careful whom we admit to. brother- 
hood. We have to make certain that 
the immigrants who are permitted to 
come to Canada will not bring a 
tainted heritage to our country. We 
have to make certain that they are 
healthy. 

We have already pointed out in a 
‘ previous article, how improper hous- 
ing gives children rickets, and rick- 
ets makes children bad-tempered and 


spiteful, and that when they grow up| 


they are almost bound to show the 
effects of this time of their life, when 
they were in ill-health, by their atti- 
tude towards their fellow-men. 

The importance of barring undesir- 
able citizens is seen from the fact 
that during the years 1924, 1926, 
1926, there were over 3,000 foreign 
citizens in Ontario alone, who were 
public charges. Under the present 
system, this situation will be great- 
ly improved. It is Lloyd George who 
said, that you “can’t raise an Al na- 
tion on C3 citizens.” 

If we bear this epigram in mind, 
the future of Canada will be a shin- 
dng mark in the pages of: history. 
Before going into detail as regards 
Canada’s system of safeguarding her 
national bloodstream by carefully 
handpicking, immigrants, let us con- 
sider some of the off-shoots, of ‘ill- 
health. And, by the way, if we think 
of each prospective immigrant as a 
blood-corpuscle seeking admission to 
our national blood-stream, we may 
get a clear picture of the importance 
of careful selection. 

First of all, let us consider crime. 
Crime in many cases, is an indirect 
consequence of ill-health. Not merely 
mental ili-health, but physical sick- 
ness. And with crime goes its cousin, 
poverty. How often do social workers 
see the progress of a man or a family 
from sickness to prison! A father 
takes sick, and becomes a chronic. 
‘invalid or dies. His children, depen- 
dent upon charity, are undernoupishy 
ed and underprivileged. Their mofTfer, 
struggling to support them, has little 
time to spgre to bring them up in the 
way they ought to go. They are un- 
disciplined. As children they join 
gangs. And when they grow up the 
gang habit remains with them. 

Unemployment they have seen, 
sickness they have seen, poverty they 
have seen; crime is the almost inevit- 
abue development in many cases, 

We have seen in the United States 
what happens when the flood-gates 


. are opened and thousands of immi- 


grants pour through them. Great 
prosperity comes, as it came to Uncle 
, Sam, but with that prosperity comes 
other disadvantages. The crime situa- 


witnesses Chicago with a murder a 
day. 

We don’t have a murder a day in 
the whole of Canada, for which heay- 
en and wise laws be praised. Expens- 
ive machinery has been set up on 
either coast, with Ottawa as the 
headquarters, to see to it that the 
crime pete cB any other difficult 
feature of bringing new citizens ‘to | 
the country, does not get out of hand. | 


that. 


The authorities carry out a most 
rigid physical examination of every 
immigrant who enters thé country. 
We have doctors in some countries 
who examite ‘the prospective citizens 


| before they leave their native land. 
| Even after that, some of the poeple 


| than those who are her own native 


“Why do you want to sell the! 
pidno so cheap?” 
‘My daughter is early old 


enough to have music lessons.” — 
Musketc, Vienna. 


W. N. U.. 1840 


are turned back because of some de- 
fect, which, either developed on the 
way over or went unnoticéd during 
the examination. The government of 
this country takes no chances of un- | 
sound and unwelcome guests enter- | 
ing our gates. 

But when the hand-picked ones who 
do pass the critical eyes of the au- 
thorities, and come to the point of 
establishing their new homes in our 
country, many problems arise. 

They are subject to more sickness 
than the native-born, and they have | 
less money with which to safeguard | 
themselves. In the United States, 
where they have had greater oppor- | 
tunities of studying the questions 
which arise from increased immigra- 
tion, it has been found that about 
forty-six per cent. of all admissions 
to, state mental hospitals were for- 
eign born. 

It has been found that 70 to 80 per 
cent. of all Italian children have rick- 
ets. ’ 

But do not think t the problem 
resolves itself into thing so sim- 
ple as making it difficult for people | 
to come to Canada to live. In fact, | 
the very reverse is desired. The Cana- 
dian Government are so anxious to | 
have right kind of immigrants, that 
great sums of money are spent an- 
nually to bring them here. But it is 
“the right kind of immigrants” only, 
that are wanted. , 

A total of twelve-million dollars | 
has been spent during the past five | 
years upon immigration projects for 
Canada. During that time 573,864 
new citizens have been introduced to 
the country. Naturally, it is in the in- 
terest of all of us, as Canadian citi- 
zens, that this influx should include 
none but the perfectly healthy. To 
this end, the Canadian Government in 
its wisdorh has found that the most 
expeditious way of operating is to 
have these immigrants examined be- | 
fore they embark for Canada. In this 
way there is a double check on them, 
and as well as that, the prospective 
Canadians do not run the risk of be- 
ing rejected at Canadian ports, there- 
by wasting money which their trip 
across has cost them. 

A staff of twenty-five qualified 
medical inspectors, appointed by the 
civil: service commission of Canada, 
and operating under the Federal De- 
partment of Health has been assigned 
to Europe. 

Eighteen of these are stationed in 
the British Isles, the remainder at 
different ports‘on the continent. 

Certificates of medical fitness, cards 
of pocket-size, bearing the photo- 
graph of the applicant, are issued to 
those who have passed the inspection 
of the immigration doctors, and these 
are good for a period of four months 
from date of issue. In other words, 
none enter Canada’s doors unless he 
has been found to be perfectly sound, 
mentally and physically. 


Wil Be Warmly Welcomed 


Native Sons Coming Back To Settle 
In Canada 

It is gratifying to. know that Cana- 
dians who had sought the “green 
pastures” of the United ‘States have. 
found that the far away hills have 
not™been so green as they had hoped 
for and they are now returning to 
Canada by thousands. The New 
England States are undoubtedly the 
finest section of the United States 
and from sixteen cities there a total 
of 41,874 Canadians have returned 
to the Dominion and the exodus is 
causing grave alarm. It is said that 
2,000 Canadians planned to leave 
Manchester, N.H., for Canada, in 
May. There are no immigrants that 
Canada will more warmly welcome 


sons and daughters. 
Member Of First Mounties 

A member of the first detachment 
of the Royal North West Mounted 
Police which travelled across the 
prairie in 1873, and which brought 
the now famous red-coat law into the | 
west, Thomas Labelle, Western Can- 
ada pioneer, died recently at Edmon- 


| ton. He was 83 years old, Mr, Labelle 
joined the force at Toronto, when it 


was organized and rode bis horse into 
the west as Constable Thomas La- 
belle. 

Harrow Inn, one of the most 
famous in Edinburgh, Scotland, is to 
be preserved as an historical attrac- 
tion, 


Gases important in the commercial 


liquifying it under heavy pressure. 


| of feed to hogs in certain parts of the 
Western provinces has been investi- 
| gated by the livestock department of 
the University of Alberta, and in 
view of the unusual ‘condition of the 
| crops there, the conclusions: drawn 
| from many experiments carried out 
| at the university are of special inter- 
fest. The problem is caused by the 
| low ash content of some of the local- 
|ly grown grains and a scarcity of 
| dairy by-products. Oats and barley 
do .not appear to contain sufficient 
mineral matter for growing pigs and 
probably 50 per cent. of the pigs 
raised in Alberta do not get any 
skim-milk or buttermilk. The main 
conclusions which may be drawn from 
mineral feeding experiments conduct- 
ed at the University are: Commissioner Henry W. Mapp, of 

1. Simple mineral mixtures may | London, England, chief of the staff 
be used to advantage in reducing the of'the Salvation Army, who will con- 
time required to put pigs on the mar-, fer for a week with Commissioner 
ket, and in reducing feed costs when} Hay and other officers of Canada 
combined protein and mineral supple- | East territory. 
ments (skim-milk and tankage, etc.) 
are not being fed. 

2. It would appear that when the 
protein requirement of pigs which | Canadian Penitentiaries Fit Them 
have been properly carried over the | For Honerable Life When 
critical weaning period and weigh Discharged 
| around 50 pounds, is taken care of by Something of the. work the peni- 

a ‘pasture crop, the most serious im-|tentiaries of Canada are doing to 
pediment to normal growth is likely ' their inmates for an honorable life on 


Giving Convicts a Chance 


ary grain ration. despatch from Kingston which says: 


Air Transport Lines 

France seeks to spread a spider's 
web of air lines over half the globe 

She wants a full share of peace 
time aerial traffic and she wants to 
train a great reserve of war time 
pilots. a 

France also desires to reach out 
her long maternal aerial arms to the 
colonies, across the Mediterranean, 
| the Atlantic and some day into the 


Iceland, one of the smallest of na- 
tions, but the greatest per capita 
exporting country, is making ready 
to entertain this summer in honor 
of the’ 1,000th birthday of her par- 
liament, the first national legisla- 
ture of the civilized world. : 

King Christian, of Denmark, who 
is also head of this independent 
monarchy, will be chief figure at 
the celebration, but all other: lead- 


ing nations will also be represented 
officially. 


andrine, Crown Prince Frederick, 
Prince Knud and other members of 
the royal household. 

Iceland being considered one of 
the. Scandinavian sisterhood, most 
of the non-official visitors are expect- 
ed to come from Denmark, Norway, 
Sweden and Finland, But special 
parties are also being organized in 
Canada, Great Britain, the United 
States, Germany, and the Nether- 
lands. These visitors. will be housed 


King Christian will travel | 
to Reykjavik on a Danish cruiser and | 
will be accompanied by Queen Alex- ; 


Pacifig, Just as she’ wants her navy 
on the seven seas she wants’ her aero 
planes flying in the air lanes that 


lead to every spot where 
60,000,000 colonials live. 
French aeroplames fly now to Great 
| Britain, Poland, all of southern and 
| eastern Europe, to Africa and South 
America, Already. there is a line as 
far east as Bagdad and pioneer work 
| is being done to have regular mail 
service to Indo-China and Madagas- 
car. The radial lines of a big part of 
the aerial web already are woven. 
“France is well aided by her geo- 
graphical situation,” says Emmanuel 


France's’ 


} 


to be mineral deficiency in the ordin-| their discharge is shown in a short 


on their ships whilé here, neither |Chaumie, chief of the Commercial 
the hotels/nor private accommoda- | Section of the air ministry, By that 
| tions of the island—there are only | he means that French territory is 
about 100,000 inhabitants in the | Spotted along many of the probable 
| kingdom—being adequate for such an | steat air routes of the world. And he 
| influx of guests. The capital itself | Would build more airfields, light more 
has a population of only 25,000. | lanes, establish more and better wire- 

While the Icelandic parliament, or | ess and weather posts to make the 
Althing, first gathered on Thingvil- | lanes over France and French colon- 


Must Carry Out Condition 


Budapest Restaurant Keeper Ordered 
To Supply Man With Dinner 
Every Day 

When in 1920 a restaurant-keeper 
in Budapest bought a house for a 


| comparatively small sum from a man 


named Andras Csepi, he undertook 
to provide the former owner with 
dinner every day for the rest of hjs 
life. He did this for two years. Then 
they quarrelled and he refused to 
provide any more meals. On the 
ground that an important condition 
of the sale was not fulfilled, Csepi 
started a law-suit to annul the sale 
of the house. The defence was that 
the provision of dinner was an act of 
charity and was only stopped because 


of Csepi's behaviour. Only recently | 


has a decision been reached—in favor 
of Csepi. The restaurant-keeper has 
been ordered to pay for all the din- 
ners he omitted to provide since 1922, 
and to see that they are furnished in 
the future. 


Six among the immortal signers of 
the Declaration of Independence were 
physicians. 


“Twenty-four convicts confined at 
| Portsmouth penitentiary will try mid- 
| dle and upper school examinations, 
19 in the first categowmgfand five in 
| the latter. One of the inmates has 
jPesees on all high school subjects.” 
| When men who have been engag- 
ed in criminal pursuits can be in- 


fluenced to study during the spare | 
‘time outside their ordinary prison | 


tasks to such good effect that they 

| qualify themselves for attendance at 
| University it is a sure sign that the 
men in charge of the penitentiaries 
|are of the right type; making them 
| places of correction rather than of 
| brutal punishment, 


East Buys Western Horses 
Evidence that the machine age is 
| not relegating the horse to the dis- 
card entirely is given in an official 
statement that in 1928 the Province 
of Ontario bought over 10,000 horses 
from the Prairie Provinces—-+Mani- 
toba, Saskatchewan and Alberta; 
| Quebec, 12,000, and the Maritime 
Provinces, 3,000, making a total of 
25,000. In the six months April'1 to 
September 30, 1929, over 20,000 
horses, raised in Western Canada, 
were sold in the Eastern provinces. 


An announcement of interest to 
those who like to have plenty of 
head-space when travelling in sleep- 
ing carg has been issued by the Cana- 
dian Pacific Railway. 

After May 1, the upper-berth in a 
standard sleeping car will be avail- 
able to a traveller holding the lower- | 
| berth section of the same section for | 
the price of the lower berth and half 
the price of the upper-berth, Former- 
|ly it was mecessary for @ passenger 
to buy a complete section, lower and 
upper-berth, paying the combined 


| world are obtained from the air by | charges for both, if the privilege of 


having an unoccupied berth overhead 


ot wert 


Cut Cost ; of Sections 


was desired. After May 1, this privi- 
lege will thus be available at a sub- 
stantial reduction. 

When sold in this way. the -upper- 
berth will not be let down, and the 
occupant, besides having more room 
for dressing and more freedom of 
movement generally, will have the 
right to use extra mattresses, pillows 
and blankets. 

When sold at the reduced prices 
the upper berths will not be available 
for sleeping purposes, and sections 
will, consequently, not be sold at 
these rates if both berths are to be 
occupied. 


jlir, or “place of assembly,”” in the | 
year 930, the history of the country | 
| goes almost two centuries back of | 
that. Irish hermits reached Iceland 
in 795 and found it uninhabited. | 
About 860 A.D., a Norwegian. viking, | 
Naddod, rediscovered the country | 
and Gardar Svavarsson, a Swede, 
was driven by storms to its shores. 

The first permanent settler 
Ingolf Arnarson, a Norwegian. 
proaching the coast in the year 874, | 
he cast overboard his high seat pil- | 
lars and vowed to make his home | 
where those symbols of permanency | 
were washed ashore, He found them | 
on the beach of what is now the 
harbor of Reykjavik and a statue | 
to his memory by Ejnar Jonoson, 
foremost Icelandic sculptor, has 
been erected here. 

The country owes its commercial 
; eminence to the fish in its waters 


| 
was | 


jes the most desirable routes for for- 
eign ‘planes to take. 

All these international. roads, 
the ministry contends, must be 
bound together by a French dom- 
estic service, intended: primarily to 
make connections between interna- 
tional lines, For France herself, it 
is felt that only long hauls will be 
profitable for some time. It is said 


Ap- that letters are written during the 


day and should be: transported by 
night and as France can be traversed 
in a very few hours there is little ad- 
vantage in sending by air what trains 
will deliver by breakfast. 


Churchill Now Has 
a Police Magistrate 


Manitoba Appoints Railway Official 
: To Fill New Position 


}and the sheep in its valleys. To- 
| gether they make up five-sixths of 
the exports, the only other sizable 
jitem being timber from the hills. 
| The total is around $13,500,000 year- 
ly, something in the neighborhood of 
$100 a month for each man, woman 
and child in the country. 

There is no army or navy to sup- 
port, but there are plenty of schools 


Evidence that Churchill is evolving 
| slowly from a frontier encampment 
| at the end of steel into a seaport 
town is seen in the action of the 
provincial government in appointing 
a police magistrate there. An order- 
in-council, signed by the Lieutenant- 
Governor, has named Ernest James 
Schofield, as police magistrate. Set- 
tlement at Churchill is not yet permit- 


and a very low rate of illiteracy. The | ‘4 by the government, but a police 


budget balances easily, the national 
debt is diminishing and the Gulf | 
Stream continues to send its warm 
waters near the coast and modify the | 
otherwise natural severity of the) 
winters. 


Acknowledged As Great Work | 


Bunyan’s “Pilgrim's Progress” Holds 
Unchallenged Place In World's 
Literature 

An‘aftermath of the John Bunyan | 
tentercentenary, which was widely | 
celebrated throughout the world in 
1928, has been the movement for 
the wider distribution of his great 


} 
| 


| magistrate is already needed there in 
the administration of justice among 


| the men engaged in rail terminal and 
| harbor construction works, who at 


present are the only inhabitants. 
ill, and is reported to be well able , 1 
Schofield is not a lawyer, but a 
railway official now stationed at 
Churchill, and is reported to be well 
qualified to discharge his new duties, 


Highest Spot In Alberta 


Is Crest Of Mount Columbia On 
Western Boundary 

According to the tnree-sheet map 

of Alberta showing elevations, pub- 


work, “The Pilgrim's Progress” | 
This product of the seventeenth | 
century has long held an unchal-— 
lenged place of permanence in the | 
world’s literature wholly apart from | 
the theological controversies that} 
attended its writing in jail by the | 
author. The book has its place to- 
day in every library, public and pri- 
vate, and it is extensively quoted far 
beyond the narrow field of propagan- 
da in which it has a natural place. 
In this connection it is of interest 
to take note of the movement tc | 
raise a fund for the wider distribu- | 
tion of the work, half of which is tc | 


be held as a permanent fund. from 


which the income only will be | 
used and half for further transla: | 
tions. The promoters of the move- | 


ment should be able to interest every | 
lover of that old “tinker out of Bed- | 
ford” who has so powerfully influ- | 
enced the minds and the imaginations | 
of men. 


Work For the Timekeeper 
If the change in daylight saving 
time bothered you, think of the 
guardian of King George's clocks at | 


edits a 
} 


lished by the Topographical Survey, 
Department of the Interior, the high- 
est point in the province is the crest 
of Mount Columbia: 9n the western 
boundary. It is 12,294 feet above 
sea level. Indications are that the 
lowest point in the province is the 
bed of Slave River at Forth Smith, 
on the northern boundary, but this 
elevation not yet having been ac- 
curately determined. 


A clay tablet telling of the fall of 
Nineveh has been dug up after 2,600 
years. 


There are from two to five eclipses 
of the sun each year. 

Turkey expects good crops this 
year. 


Windsor Castle, in England. He had | 
| to adjust 360 time-pieces of various 
| makes and ages to the new schedule. | 
| Not even the first lever watch ever | 
| made, which was recently discovered | 
| at the castle, or the famous old clock 
|in Curfew Tower, made in 1690, 
| escaped. 
| 


Sixty thousand workers are en- | 
| gaged in the German porcelain in- 
| dustry. 


-_~ 
a 


“Il want a thousand live fleas.” 

| “What for?” 

FOE 2 EAT Oe “I want to move and my landlady 
Norway exported 46,500 tons of | says I must leave the room as I 

fish jn a recent month, | found it.”-—-Pages Gales, Yverdon 


. from’ the train to Montreal, Toronto, 


awake with 


WRIGLEYS. 


Drowsiness is dangerous. ’ 
Weary miles seem shorter . 
and the day is brightened when 
you have Wrigley’s with you. 


Ite sugar peps you up. Ite 
o any 


delicious flavor adds 
enjoyment. 


A five cent package 
{s safety insurance 


WORLD HAPPENINGS - 
BRIEFLY TOLD 


Dr, Charles Camsell, deputy minis- 
ter at Ottawa, was chosen to head 
the Royal Society of Canada for the 
next year. 


Since removing of embargo on ex- 
port of precious metals in January, | 
the amount of gold. shipped from} 
Japan totals about $87,450,000. 


Bert White, 77, leapt from an areo- 
plane 25,000 feet above, Lancaster, 
California, and made a safe landing 
in an attempt to make a record para- 
chute jump. 

Construction of a 1,500 mile elevat- 
ed electric railroad across the Sa- 
hara Desert is under discussion in 
Paris. The estimated cost is $117,- 
000,000. 

William Chalmers, of Vancouver, 
“B.A.” and “M.A.” graduate of Mc- 
Gill University, has been awarded 
the Governor-General’s silver medal 
for graduate research in chemistry. 

Hon. Dr. J. H. King, Dominion 
Minister of . Pensions and. National 
Health, is the new president of the 
Canadian branch of the St..John Am- 
bulance Association. He succeeds Sen- 
ator Hewitt Bostock. 


Miss Betty Carstairs has bought a 
whole boat building yard at Cowes, 
England, in order to keep secret the 
details of a speedboat she is building 
in the hope of capturing the world’s 
speedboat title. 

The Senate has passed more divorce 
bills during the present session than, 
in any other year during the past 
ten yéars, if not since Confederation, 
it was revealed in a report submitted 
recently by Hon. A. B. Copp, vice- 
chairman of the divorce committee. 

James Smart, District Inspector of 
Dominion Forestry Services, with 
headquarters at Prince Albert, Sask., 
has been appointed superintendent of 
the Riding Mountain National Park, 
in Manitoba. The appointment was 
announced by Hon. Charles Stewart, 
Minister of*the Interior. 


Service Becoming Popular 


Passengers Are Using Telephone On 
Canadian National Trains 

Since the installation of telephone 
service on the Canadian National | 
trains, there has been an average of | 
six calls a trip, between Montreal and 
Toronto, and in the other direction, 
according to W. D. Robb, vice presi- 
dent, in whose department the ser- 
vice cémes. Most of them have been 


Kingston, Oshawa, Hamilton, London, 
and other points, one being made to 
Ashville, New York. Several have 
been made to the moving train from 
outside points. 


Colonel Gustavo Leon, noted Mexi- 
can aviator, will attempt in May to 
follow the Lindbergh air trail across 
the Atlantic, if efforts to finance the 


venture are snbia cit 


One of life’s little ironies is found 
in the fact that a fifty-dollar tele- 


— a a, 


|of lengthening the silhouette. 


Ireland Only Country 
Without War Memorial 


Money Subscribed But Political Feel- 
ing Has Barred Brection 


Of all the countries that took part, 


in the Great War, Ireland,is the only 
one still without a National Memor- 
ial. to her dead. The money, some 
£50,000 has long since been subserib- 
ed, but political rancour has all 
along thwarted the objects of the 
subscribers. It is felt by a, great 
body of Trishmen abroad As well as 
at home, that a National tribute to 
the 60,000 [rish soldiers who fell in 
the War, should occupy one of Dub- 
‘lin's -hest central positiong. Political 
feeling, however, has rendered ‘this 
impossible, and all 
that the Free State 


to offer a site beside a little-used 


| roadway some miles beyond the city 


boundary. This proposal the Me- 
morial Committee naturally rejected, 
and it is quite possible, that, if as 
an alternative to a central city site 
a prominent place in Phoenix Park 
eannot be ‘obtained, Belfast may 
be asked to find a position~ worthy 
of the Memorial. 


Newspaper Union 


—_ 
i} te 
v 


Winnipeg 


the assistance | 
Government | 
have given in the matter has been | 


| New Motor For Airplanes 
| 
| May Solve Problem Of Ocean Flying 
Says German Authority 
A tiny motor about as big a beer) 
bottle, with characteristics of both | 
a blast furnace ‘and a refrigerator, | 
may ‘solve ocean flying, believes Dr. | 
| Paul Heylandt, liquid gas authority, | 
| will 1éadto development. of'a special | 
type of rocket-propelled ‘plane which | 
will shoot ‘up 40,000 feet and. travel | 
at. 650 miles. an hour. | 
The motor; an elongated, pistol- | 
| shaped dram of hardest steel, is a) 
one - cylinder, valveless contraption | 
| devoid of "pistons or othef, movable | 
| parts, into ‘the front end liquid oxy- | 
| gen is Sptayed, while Into. the further | 
jend, near the exhauset, liquid fuel, 
such as wood alcohol, benzine, gaso- | 
line, or even fuel oil is injected. 
| At the entrance points of both | 
components into the motor there are | 
spraying attachments which diffuse | 
the liquids over the entire hollow in- 
side. The liquid fuel is ignited as it 
comes in contact with the liquid oxy- | 


gen. The result is as continuous, | 


recoil of 220 horse-power with a mo- | 
tor of only 11 pounds. The best Ger- | 
man automobile motors produce only | 
about half a horse-power of propul- | 
sive energy per pound. | 

As the two: conmponents explode, | 
they ehit a steady stream of smoke- | 
less, sootless fire about a yard long. 
The noise is deafening, and. easily 
greater than that of the 2 motors 
of Dornier’s “DO-X"' combined. The 
| heat. at the exhaust is such that, | 
when Valier during one demonstra- | 
tion did not mix the two components 
correctly, the exhaust simply melted | 
away. Cold produced by the liquid 
air is such that the conducting 
pipes accumulate a thick coat of 
frost. ; 

.“Our experinients with the rocket | 
car are only a step toward our 
real goal, a motor for aeroplanes in- 
tended to go up into the strato- 
sphere,” Dr. Heylandt observed. 
“One essential thing is that both 
components are so separated as to 
avert all danger of explosion. — 

“The rocket car will never be a 
practical proposition except for rac- 
ing purposes. . Naturally, no police 
authorities could stand for a car 
making such a noise. As soon 4s 
possible, therefore, we want to ex- 


reflects a new note in * modified 
Princess styling, which makes it so 
suitable for casual daytime wear. 

’ The tiers show a downward curv- 
ing tendency at back, a clever means 


They 
are finished at top with novel faille 
crepe silk applied band that ties in 
youthful bow at front. 

The neckline in deep open V-shape 
employs the same trim for applied 
band. Long sleeves also gathered 
into cuffs of the crepe with tab énds. 

Design No. 3278 comes in sizes 16, 
18 years, 36, 38, 40 and 42 inches 


bus) 

e trimming bands work out 
nicely cut from the dull surface in 
crepe satin, which is so important 
now in soft brown shade. 

Black silk crepe,’plum shade in 
wool crepe, tiny self-checked pattern 
in bottle green feather - weight 
woolen, tomato red crepe de chine, 
crepe marocain in dahlia purple and 
navy blue faille crepe appropriate 
and chic. 

Pattern price 25 cents. Be sure to 
fill in size of pattern. Address Pat- 
tern Department. 


How To Order Patterns 


Address: Winnipeg Newspaper Union, 


phone pole can so completely demol- 
Ish a $3,000 motor-car,. 


3. 
an 7A 


DISTRACTION.—En Rolig Half 
Timma, Cothenborg 


W. N. U. 1860 


175 McDermot Ave., Winnipeg 


Pattern No...... Size . 


een steams 


Tere eee eee eee eee eee eee Perey 


Advice For Farm Boys 

The difficulty in securing work in 
the towns and cities abroad, will have 
a tendency to make young men more 
contented on the farm, and give them 
a desire to make improvements there 
that might ultimately put them on 
the road to better things. Flat as 
farming is at the present moment it 
is no flatter than the trade in the 
towns and cities. 


periment with a rocket ’plane.” 


A Tribute To Nansen 


Explorer Did Splendid Work After 
,, Olose Of War 

Fridtjof Nansen, when the war 
closed, was already fifty-six years 
old. Arctic exploration is a young 
man’s game; or should be. Nansen's 
chief assault upon the Pole, the voy- 
age of the “Fram,” was already’ a 
quarter of a century in the past. 
He had wone credit and fame as a 
scientist, educator, administrator of 
learned bodies. It could hardly have 
been supposed that his chief life work 
still lay before him. : . 

Nansen lived in a small country, 
a country neutral in the war. He 
was a natural choice, an. ideal one 
as it proved, to head the great work 
of repatriation of war prisoners and 
the relief of hunger in civilian pop- 
ulations. He threw himself into the | 


and mitigated to some extent the suf- 
ferings of millions of half-starving | 
people. His work in Russia repre- 
senting forty-eight Red Cross so-| 
cieties and twelve nations served as 
aid and precursor of Mr. Hoover's 
great task of relief wihch Russians 
remember with so much gratitude. 


ticularly, but still in the pathway 
of peace, as its representative with | 
the League of Nations, In 1924 while | 
so serving he was instrumental in 
smoothing the way of Germany into | 
the League. In 1923 the Nobel Peace | 
Prize was awarded to him with uni- 
versal approval. In 1925 a very un- 
usual honor was paid to him in a 
foreign land by his election as Rec- 
tor of St. Andrew's University. His 
closing years found him still happily 


engaged in scientific pursuits and in [ 


the completion of his admirable body 
of. literary work. His was the singu- 
larly useful career of a well @yuipped 
man whose talents and ideals exactly 
fitted the needs of the stirring times 
through which he lived. 


Not Ashamed To Ask 

“How is it that you have attained 
so high a degree of knowledge?” was 
the question once put to an Eastern 
sage. 

“My son,” answered the wise man, 
“my knowledge has come to me in a 
way that thou canst easily follow: 
What I knew not, I was not ashamed 
to ask about, and by this means have 
gathered much wisdom,” 


steady combustion which produces a+ 


work with all his splendid energy _ 


Nansen served Norway more par- * 


ro 


THH REVIEW, REDCLIFF, ALBERTA 


DO You : 
SUFFER FROM 
CONSTIPATION? 


Countless remedies are advertised 
‘or constipation, Many relieve for 
the moment but they are habit form- 
ing and must be continued. Others 
contain calomel and dangerous min- 
eral drugs, which remain in the sys- 
tem, settle in the. joitits and cause 
aches and pains’ .Some are harsh 
purgatives which cramp and gripe 
and leave a depressed after effect. 

Avoid lubricating oils which only 
grease the intestines and éncourage 
nature’s machinery to become lazy. 

A_ purely vegetable laxative such 
as Carter’s Little Liver Pills, gently 
touches the liver, bile starts to flow, 
the bowels move gently, the intestines 
are thoroughly cleansed and constipa- 
tion poisons pass away, The stomach, 
liver and bowels are now active and 
the system we a real tonic effect. 
All druggists 25c and 75c red pkgs. 


Recipes For This Week 


(By Betty Barclay) 


ASPARAGUS. WITH MOOK 
HOLLANDAISE SAUCE 


1 tablespoon butter. 

2 tablespoons. flour. 

% cup milk. 

% teaspoon salt. 

1%% teaspoon pepper. 

Few grains cayenne. 
Yolks of 2 eggs. 

cup butter. 

tablespoon lemon juice. 
Asparagus. 

Prepare as for white sauce. Stir in 
beaten egg yolks after sauce is cook- 
ed. Add the 4% cup butter bit by bit 
and finally the lemon juice, Pour over 
strips of cooked asparagus. Garnish 
with pimento. : 

The savory flavor of celery top 
greens blends well with roast fowl 
and dressing. 


SALMON LOAF 


1 tablespoon lemon juice. 
Cayenne. 
1 teaspoon salt. 

1 Ib. can salmon, 

2 small eggs. 

24 cup chopped celery. 

1% cups bread crumbs. 

14 teaspoon baking powder. 

1% cup evaporated milk. ' 

Add lemon juice, cayenne and salt 
to boned, flaked salmon, then beaten 
eggs, cedery, bread crumbs, baking 
powder and milk. Shape into a loaf 
and place in an oiled baking pan. 
Bake in a moderate oven (350 de- 
grees Fahrenheit) until brown and 
firm. Serve with medium white sauce 
or egg sauce. Yield: 5 servings. 


hs 
me 


Dairying and Mining 

‘The annual value of Canadian dairy 
products—$297,625,000—is a few mil- 
lion dollars less. than the annual 
value of the mineral production of 
the Dominion. A_ total of 286,000 
farmers supplied milk and cream to 
the 2,883 dairy factories throughout 
the Dominion last year. 


Pedestrians who cross the streets 
recklessly in Berlin are to be prose- 
cuted. After they come out of the 
hospital, probably. 


Has Furnace Underground 


Novel System Used By Oklahoma 


Gardener To Speed Up Vegetable 
Growth 
The thought of growing celery, 
sweet potatoes, tomatoes, radishes 
and the like in the State of Okla- 
homa before winter is over, without 


the aid of hot-houses, seems impos-| . 


sible.. But E. B. Johnson, local agri- 
cultural expert, has & novel system 
with which he is just doing that. 

His ‘method lies in the installation 
of a furnace heating systent which 
keeps the winter-chilled ground at 
a moderate temperature until warm- 
er weather arrives. Pipe, six inches in 
diameter, runs front the furnace and 
is placed in parallel rows, three feet 
apart. At one end are the furnace 
ovens and at the other chimneys to 
draw the smoke through. 

The first of this series of furnace 
heated gardens installed by Johnson 
is 87 feet long and 30 feet wide with 
10 large chimneys, each connected 
with a string of pipe. 

“At the front end of the garden, 
where the furnaces are, the heat is 
greater so Johnson’ has buried the 


tile 24 inches in the ground with a} 


general incline as they approach the 
chimneys. until at the rear they are 
but five inches underground. 

Over this bed of seed he has 
placed an inch of dirt and four inches 
of sawdust, the latter to be removed 
when the weather moderates. It is 
only necessary to keep the fires go- 
ing until the seed starts sprouting. 

Johnson, through years of experi- 
ence, has worked out this heating 
ratio almost to perfection. For «a 


number of years he was connected | 


with various fruit and vegetable 
growers in and near Rogers, Ark., 
and last December moved to Okla- 
homa to pioneer such a movement 
in this part of the country. 

Sweet potatoes were planted by 
Johnson on March 17, and he expect- 
ed to have small slips fully a month 
earlier than they can be grown other- 
wise, Ordinarily under local weather 
conditions it would be May 15 before 
plants as large could be raised, John- 
son says. ; 

Johnson has built up quite a name 
for himself as a_ certified seed 
grower throughout the southwest. 
He ships sweet potato plants to all 
parts of the United States and last 
year furnished a greater part of the 
sweet potato slips shipped into the 
state of Washington: —- : 

George D. Rule, state sweet potato 
inspector for Oklahoma, has approv- 
ed Johnson’s present line of work. 
Johnson for years has worked under 
the supervision of the state board of 
agriculture. 


A Peculiar Accident 

When the parachute worn by a 
mechanic’ flying in an army ‘plane 
was accidentally opened, the me- 
chanic was pulled into the air, 
smashed against the -tail of the 
*plane, and pilot and mechanic were 
killed when the machine fell into the 
sea. 


Orchids priced at $500 a ey were 


recently exhibited in London, Eng- 


land. 


This unbreakable 
light and flexible, easy 


perat 


Many Areas ‘Tested 
Since beginning the testing of cat- 
tle for tuberculosis in 1915, a total of 
1,469,769 animals have been tested, in 
Canada and 14 areas declared free of 
the disease. ? 


MADE IN ENGLAND SINCE 
glass substitute is 


i thstand extreme changes in tem- 
ce, keeps out cold and wet, but 


THE ORIGINAL GLASS SUBSTITUTE 


1917 ON ORIGINAL PATENTS 


to cut and fit, | cluding the 


any length, but 36 inches wide only. 


‘Distributors: JOHN A. CHANTLER & CO., LTD. 


51 Wellington St. W. - - - . 


AUAAUQOUAGAAUCOOERMAAAAOUEAAOUAAOUGOG4AUGUAUOOOAS000U0000000000500090QEUS0ENGQ0O0UREUQ0L U44UGEAUOCO0LA000S000 00400800 E 


allows the full sunlight to enter,” in- 


Rays, which do not penetrate ordinary 
glass. ’ 


Pe pet hh ated gah ry ini minute; 
boils goin fewhours, At all druggists. 


| Changing Styles In Fiction 


Each Generation Has Different Idea 
Of What Is Interesting 


There are faint but unmistakable 
signs of a revulsion against the new 
| style of war books which have been 
| all the rage for @ year past. That is 
| as it should be, for they were neith- 

er great literature nor true to life 
asa rule; On the whole they were’ 
| read less by grizzled veterans than 
; by young: ladies who liked being 
shocked by stories of strong drink 
and strong language at secoridhand. 
It was a change from what the 
trade called Sheik-stuff which . was 
| itself a revulsion from the Sentimen- 
| tal Tommy style, which was itself a 
| novelty after strong silent men, gods 
|in the car, and other sternly mascu- 
| line types that delighted and thrill- 
\ed the feminine readers of thirty 
| years ago. So the clock of fashiori- 


}able fiction goes round, and every 
| generation worships the idols of its 
fathers under the delusion that they 
have discovered something new. 


An Unusual Bequest 


! Deaf Woman Wills Ears To Science 
For Research Purposes 

In the hope that medical science 
can aid others by a study of her ears, 
deaf since childhood, Miss Abby Hos- 
mer, 70, wealthy Chicago woman, has 
willed them for research purposes 
after she dies. 

The unusual will was announced by 
Dr. Austin A. Hayden, at a meeting 
of physicians and ear specialists. © - 

“Until medical science can e 
opportunity to make fiver. 
studies of the ears of those deaf- 
ened during their lifetime, we will 
remain considerably in the dark as 
to why one out of ten persons suf- 
fers from some form of this malady,” 
Dr. Hayden said. 


At any rate the Toronto Telegram 
points out, there are eight. young ci- 
tizens of Canada who are not puz- 
zled over what they will call the new 
lady senator. 4 


Get InOn The 


Ground Floor 


Invest in a company 
owning Canadian, United 
States and British patents. 
on articles being used by 
Railroads, Steamships, Oil 
and. Mining Companies 
Hotels, Factories, Ware- 
houses, Homes and Office 
Buildings. ~ Write at once 
for full particulars to 

8S. P. MILLER 
904 Dominion Bank Building, 
Vancouver, B.C. 


len 


| 


————— 


Make Your Windows Pay 


‘Invest in WINDOLITE Windows and you will be repaid a 
hundredfold in the health of your Poultry and Live Stock 


health-giving Ultra-Violet 


USE 
WINDOLITE 
IN 


BROODER 
HOUSES 


LAYING PENS 
DAIRY BARNS 
SUNROOMS 
ETO, 


‘TORONTO, ONT. 


Former Preach Posie 


Has Great Faith In The 


Future Of Aeronautics 


Giant trans - Atlantic aeroplanes 
hurtling through dizzy altitudes at 
terrific speeds, the passengers breath- 
ing oxygen supplied from special 

¢ tanks, will soon make Paris less than 
10 hours from New York, M. Paul 
Painleve, former premier of France, 
told the United Press. 

“Perhaps I shall live to .see the 
day,” Said the 67-year-old former 
premier, “when, these specially con- 
structed 'planes Will roar 
the thin air at altitudes above 32,000 
feet at speeds surpassing 300. and | 
400.miles an hour. 

“When the technical problems for 
the construction of these high-alti- 
tude speed airboats are. solved, 
then will trans-Atlantic air service 
become a reality. Lindbergh's solo 
flight stimulated the solution of 
these difficulties and perhaps before 
I die, aeroplanes speeding at 300 
and 400 miles an hour high above 
both clouds, rain and tricky air 
currents will link Paris with North 
America.” 

Seated at his desk, littered with 
mathematical treatises and scientific 
manuscripts, M. Painleve waved his 
hands at the bookcases which covered 
the walls ffom floor to ceiling of his 
study. 

“In 1902 when I was well along 
in my study of those books and was 
beginning to do a little mathematical | 
thinking myself, I convinced myself 
that heavier-than-air flight was pos- 
sible. Six years later Orville and 
Wilbur Wright came to: France with 
their crazy air-machine. I knew it 


| 
would fly, and it did. My six-year-old | mula, “One civilization but two na- official of the British Columbia gOv- | 


dream had come true and since then 
I have never lost my faith in avia- 
tion. 

“Three years ago Lindbergh landed | 
at LeBourget. His flight was just as | 
important as the first trial I made 

- with Wilbur Wright in 1908. The one) 
proved the ‘plane was feasible, the 
other demonstrated it was the world’s 


i 


Translation Was Difficult 


Austrian Chancellor's Remark Did | 


Not Lend Itself To French 
Language 
Chancellor Schober, of Austria, 


who has been visiting all the princi- 
pal ‘European capitals in succession 
uring the past few months, had .a 


| curioys adventure in Paris just, before 


} 


\ | going to 
through | 


London. This adventure 
might be considered unimportant ex- 
cept that it illustrates how many 
European differences are due to dif- 
ferent languages and different habits 
| of thought. 

Dr. Schober was asked by a Par- 


isian interviewer what his conception | 


of Austro-German relations was. The 
chancellor replied: “I consider Aus- 
tria and Germany as one people but 
two nations.” 


The interviewer, who understands | 


German perfectly, applauded 
definition, which emphasized  Aus- 
tria'’s determination to remain inde- 
pendent. But unfortunately, in at- 
tempting to translate the 
lor's words into French, he could not 
find the exact equivalents and made 
the statement read; “One nation but 
two states.” 

This precipitated a tremendous 
howl in the French Nationalist 
! press and led Dr. Schober to issue 
a@ succession of. statements’ in which 
he attempted to correct the false 
impressions but each statement. led 
him into new pitfalls until he finally 
was obliged to elaborate his original 
epigram into the meaningless for- 


tions and two governments.” 


— Newspaper Unioa 


this | 


chancel, | 


The Power Of Lightning 


Man Cannot Freduce Force Contained 
In Single Flash 

When a great thunderstorm. is rag- 
ing we realize something of the stu- 
| pendous powers of electricity, says 
| an article in Tit-Bits. If a cat's 
back is rubbed in the dark during hot 
dry. weather, sparks will often fly 
| from it. The sparks are harmless, 
though they \are Kientical with light- 
| ning’ flashes, and the crackling which 
| Actompanies them is thunder on a 
| Small ‘scale. In a thunderstorm the 
earth represents your hand and* the 
| clouds are the cat's back. The pres- 
| Sure which causes a flash of light- 
ning may be as much as 1,000,009,000 
volts--5,000,000 tjmes greater than 
that which is used for household 
lighting. Could we collect and har- 
ness the power set free by a single 
flash of lightning we should have at 
our disposal a,force greater than any- | 
thing which can be produced by man, 
In a famous scientist's laboratory 
there was tried the experiment of 
| producing -a million-volt spark. It 
leapt a ten-foot gap with a noise like ie 
| the explosion of a bomb, and nearly 


| wrecked the building. Most of the 
lightning in a thunderstorm does not 
approach near the earth, but flashes | 
| from cloud to cloud. Occasionally a 
|fork tongue leaps. from cloud: to 
earth, and then anything in its path 
is destroyed. | 


Resents Removal 
Of Indian Carvings 


British Columbia Wants Valuable 
Work Kept In Canada 

There is great indignation at the 

| wholesale removal of Indian carvings | 

from British Columbia to the United 

| States, says a letter received at the | 

national museum, Ottawa, from an 


| ernment. At present there are a great 
many influential people who ‘do not 


New Vice President 


Jeorge Stephen who succeeds W. | 


R. MaciInnes as Vice-President in| 
charge of Traffic, Canadian Pacific 
| cescaphides 4 


Poultry From E.P. Ranch | | 


Prince Of Wales Will Exhibit At 
World's Congress 

Birds from the ranch of H.R.H. the 

Prince of Wales, at Pekisko, near 

High River, Alberta, will be among 

the many “interesting exhibits at the | 


_| World’s Poultry Congress, to be held 


at the Crystal Palace, London, Eng- 
land, July 22 to July 28; 1930. An- 


other exhibit that is likely to attract’ | 


attention will be the birds from the 
royal aviary at Windsor Castle. Can- 


‘ada has a particular interest in this’) 


aviary for among the birds are some | 
Canadian Barred Rock presented to 
His Majesty, King George V. by the 
Canadian Government following the 
| second’. World’s Poultry ‘Congress at | 
Barcelona, Spain, in 1924. This trio | 
was the finest that could be procured 
in Canada. An exhibit of “1,000: birds | 


= 
Provinces Need 
Federal Government To 


| Build N ational Highway 


Annual Agricultural Statistics 


Every Farmer Asked To Fill In and 
Return Schedule 

It is the tustom ofthe Dominion 

Bureau of Statistics to. co-operate 


| Dominion-wide census 
| agricultural 


| year. 


of important 
facts in June of each 


‘The census takes the form of a 
simple cardboard schedule, distribut- 
} ed to individual farmers through the 
|} medium of the rural school teachers 
| and pupils {nm seven provinces, and in 
Ontario and British Columbia through 
the. rural postal offices, The essential 
| object is to reach every farmer and 
| to encourage as many as possible to 
|All in and return the schedule. 

The two.main phases of farm pro- 
duction—the areas of field crops and 
the numbers}, of live stock—are cov- 
ered by the form. The areas of field 
crops determined from the schedules 
are combined later in the season with 
the esttmated average yields per acre 


to determine the total yield for the | 


‘country. In the case of wheat, partic- | 
| ularly, the importance of having cor- 
rect estimates of acreage is thus | 
made apparent. Although there are 
many estimates of anticipated pro- 
| | duction, 
| the one. Official acreage estimete, | 
which has been issued annually since 
1917, by the Dominion Bureau of 
| Statistics. 


| value of a wide.sample to the attain- 
| ment of accurate statistics, and it is | 
| our hope to obtain a completed sche- 


| dian farmers. The more numerous the 


Alor 


with the nine provinces in taking a | 


most of these are based on | 


| It is* unnecessary to emphasize the | 


dule from the great majority of Cana- | 


A complete teand-contindutal high- 
way in Canada may be a somewhat 
remote goal, but it. is worthy’ of 
observation that it is néw engaging 
the attention of Members of Parlia‘ 
ment from one end of the country 
; to the other. In thé recent 
on the subject such 
leaders as Hon. Dr. 
Charles Stewart,. Hon. 
rie, Hop. Charles Dunning, the 
| Prime Minister, Hon. R. B. Bennett, 
Mr. Woodsworth and others indicat- 
ed an increasing concern for. the 
scheme. In -connection with the 
matter, Dr. Manion supplied ‘the in- 
teresting information that there re- 
mains only some 330 miles.of high- 
way yet to be constructed, and he 
advanced the argument that as this 
{ was through unproductive provincial 
territory, It might well be expected 
that the Dominion would contribute 
| towards the construction of it. One 
, of the strongest arguments in favor 
of the project advanced in the 
House of Commons was that there 
is no national highway commun- 
cation above the head of the Great 
Lakes and that transportation by 
motor must be through a_ foreign 
country. A year ago Mr. King esti- 
mated the cost of a national trans- 
continental highway at 200 million 
dollars. but Dr. Manion suggests 
that the link above the Lakes might 
be completed for 5 or’ 6 millions, His 
; Suggestion that the Dominion might 
very well co-operate with Ontario 
regarding the cost seems not un- 
'reasnoable, Dr. Manion put the mat- 
ter in this way: “There is this to 
| remember regarding the building of 
national and provincial highways, 


‘debate 
parliamentary 
Manion, , Hon 
Hugh Guth- 


want any of the objects mentioned | is being sent to the World's Poptey 
in the Indian act, such as ‘totem, Congress from Canada. 
poles, carved , rave monuments, 


carved rock inscriptions and paint- One Way T To Count Cost 
ings on cliffs. and large boulders, 


removed from the province, the let-' Expenditure In Great War Would | 


| that the provinces are in perhaps a 
returns received, the more reliable rather, difficult position to under- 
| will be the estimates compiled from | take aloné the building of .a nation- 
them. Much of Canadian economical highway. Take, for ‘instance, 
enterprise Uepends to some degree on | across the northern section of On- 
| correct estimates of agricultural pro- 


tario extending from Sudbury to the 


best. means of rapid transportation. | 
Lindbergh set the best aviation ex- 
perts of the world studying means of 
perfecting aeroplane motors and 


ter continues. 4 
Commenting on the matter, the 
archaeologist at thé national mu- 


duction in the making of their plans. 


Have Built Many Garden Cities | ¢ any farmer does not receive the 


The League of Nations reports the 
cost of the Great War at $363,000,- 


cardboard schedule by the middle of | 
June, he should apply to the school | 


Manitoba boundary, an area nearly 
|as large as Germany and France put 
together, with a population of only 
200,000. This sparse population re- 


‘equipment. The Wright Brothers, 

Bleriot and Lindbergh are a trio of 

names upon which aviation history. 
stands.” 

The famous mathematician-poli- 
tician declared there are only two 
certain methods of conquering the 
Atlantic by air. The first is by 
developing machines to fly in ex- 
treme altitudes, thus lessening re- 
sistance, increasing speed, and de- 
creasing danger through atmos- 
pheric conditions, and the second 
is to establish floating islands for 
“use with present-type of aeroplanes. 


Although Painleve. said he be- 


lieved floating landing fields were 
feasible, he thought the future of 


aviation rested in flying high at] 


terrific speeds. The machine would 
have to be constructed in such a 
- manner to resist the unequal pres- 
sure, and both’ passengers and 
crew would have to be supplied 
with oxygen to breathe at such 
‘dizzy altitudes. 


Six times M. Painleve has been). 


minister of war, and yet he is not 
convinced that the aeroplane is the 
most formidable unit for use in the 
next war, which Painleve hopes will 
never come for at heart he is an ar- 
dent pacificist. ‘ 

“Aeroplanes have their use in 
war,” he said, “but they will not be 
so dangerous as many people like to 
believe. New anti-aircraft guns are 
being perfected which will make the 


3248 
Here is a cute model for classroom 
for the little sub-deb who admires 


average airman in the next war feel | | snappy clothes that are simple and 


like a partridge under bombardment | 
from a thousand shot-guns. No, the 


‘plane is more interesting to me for 


its commercial value.” 


“Any insanity in the family?” ask- 
ed the insurance doctor of Mrs. Suf- 
fragist. 

“Well, no—only my _ husband 
imagines he is the head of the house,” 


all 


“Mary, I see you have drunk 
my brandy.” 
“Yes, sir, to get over my shock.” 
“What* shock 7?” 
“I broke the large mirror in the 
wing room.”—Paiges Gaies, Yver- 
* . 


| 


smart. 

It is navy blue wool crepe printed 
in dark and vivid red tones and belt- 
ed at normal waistline with plain red 
in the dark shade of grosgrain ribbon. 
The collarless neckline is softened by 
self-fabric bow tie. 

It is moulded through the waist 
and hips with slight blousing above 
belt with new flared fulness intro- 
duced in skirt through soft gathered 
flounce with upward tendency at 
front. : 

This attraetive style No. 3248 
comes in sizes 8, 10, 12 and 14 years. 
For the girl of 8 years, it can be 
copied exactly with 1% yards of 39- 
inch material and grosgrain ribbon 
belt. 

There are many other fabrics 
equally fashionable and suitable as 
erepe de chine, wool challis prints, 
rayon crepe and wool jersey. 

Pattern price 25 cents. Be sure to 
fill in size of pattern. Address Pat- 
tern Department. 


How To Order Patterns 


Address—Winnlpeg Newspaper Uaiog, 
176 McDermot Ave, Winnipeg 


PatierD NOW ce eeseee BO me ccee 
See wee were sores ere renee see eens 
Oe 


Pritt tt 


Pe ee) 


seum declared that recently a retired | 000,000 and 37,000,000 lives—that is 
United States naval officer: collected | four times the total population of | 
certain beautifully carved spindle | Canada, not merely of lives, but 
whorls, formerly used by the Indians’! jives of selected men, competent in 
in spinning mountain goat wool, and virtue of admirable qualities to meet 
took them out of the dominion while | the .most terrible responsibilities 
a representative of the national mu- | |that an. imperfect civilization’ can 
seum was searching for just such | piace upon men. The cost in money 
specimens, would have built 181,500 garden 
cities, where the evils of congested | 


teacher of the nearest rural school, to 


quires branch roads and a large 
his provincial Department of Agri- 


amount of money is being expended 
culture, er to the Dominion Statis-|in the construction of branch colon- 
tician, at Ottawa. Letters addressed ization and settlers roads. Therefore 
to the Dominion chanerenases require |the provincial government should 


no postage. not be expected to build the whole 
of this national highway across that 
. Is Doing Good wk section of Northern Ontario. That, 


after all, is the only section remain- 


oe 
“Will Be Well Represented 


Junior Red Cross Teaching Children 


living, the sordidness, the ugliness | 
Fifty-five cities in the United States land the despair that ‘breeds resent- To Avold Disease 
and Canada will be represented at the; ment, anger, broken’ homes, il!-| The number of deaths of Snidren 
fourth World's Poultry Congress | bred-children, crime ‘and disease | Of School age would be “shocking” if 


which has been organized by the| would have had no seed bed for 


Governments of. Great Britain andj 
Northern Ireland, and a large number 
of the attending poultrymen will sail 
on the Canadian Pacific ins 
“Duchess of York” from Montreal on 


will take place, from July 22-30, 


A recently 
makes it possible to talk 200 feet un- 
derground and through solid stone. 


Workingmen’s singing clubs are 
paciati popular in Germ 


Passenger service on the Great Lakes is now opened for the summer 


growth. 


‘An All Canadian Firm 


‘The Beatty Brothers factory at 
‘Fergus, Ontario, ‘has made a record 
July 12, headed for the Crystal | shipment of laundry equipment sets 
‘Palace, London, where the Congress:; some 8,000 of them—over Canadian 
Pacific lines for various destinations. 
It is pointed out that every item of 
invented radiophone | the equipment was made in Canada | 
and every official and employee of the 


company is Canadian. 


Some specimens of the California | 


fan palm reach an age of 200 years. 


Pa - fee 
"il, 


we were not so accustomed to their 
daily and hourly occurrence. There is 
such a death every ten minutes. It is 
nothing short of appalling to study 
the statistics of the mortality and 
morbidity of our school-age boys and 
girls. Such a tale of woe as the story 
of death and its causes has been giv- 
en us by our neighbors across the 
line. Dr. J. F. Rogers, Chief of 
| School Hygiene Division, and Physi- 
| cal Education, Washington, has issued 
a sheet of figures that should be in 
the hand of every parent and school 
| teacher. 

Roughly speaking in the registra- 
tion area of 103,000,000 persons, one 
child in every five hundred children 
died in a year. A thoughtful reader 
will look with interest at the reasons 
for this slaughter of the innocents. 
Particularly striking is it, in these 
days of speed traffic, to observe the 
figures for accidents and automobilé 
deaths. Seven per cent. died from 
autos and 21 per cent. from acci- 
dents. 

The doctor goes on to say that 
practically all the deaths from the 
following diseases were preventable, 
Typhoid, smallpox, diphtheria, dysen- 
try, syphilis, rabies, tetanus. By bet- 
ter protection from infection tuber- 
culosis would take a less heavy toll. 
With greater sick-care and more 
knowledge fewer children would die 
of measles and scarlet fever, whoop- 
ing cough, etc, It was estimated that 
thdre could be a certain saving of 
56,000 lives a year, or thinking in 
terms of cents and dollars $100,000,- 
000. 

There will doubtless be better ma- 
ehinery established for public health 
in the generations to come, and this 
reproach will be wiped away. Today 
among the foremost agencies in the 
field for the furtherance of a health- 
ler citizenry is the Red Cross. Its far 
reaching Junior Work has enlisted 
approximately 12,000,000 Juniors in 


ing to link up these different roads 
| which could be,"for the time being 
at least, turned into a trans-Canada 
or a Canadian national highway. 
Therefore, because of the demands of 
the province, it is particularly neces- 
sary, if the road is to be built, that 
the Dominion Government should 
take part in the work. The Dominion 
Government should also take part in 
this road-building from the national 
aspect of linking up the east and the 
west.” 


People Make Living 
From Watercress Beds 


Plant Grows In Profusion In Pictur- 
esque English Village 

Motoring between Henley and Net- 
tlebed recently, says a writer in the 
London Evening “News, I came for 
the first time upon “Watercress Vil- 
lage.” It must be unique in England. 
Its name is Ewelme, pronounced 
Yewelm. A stream as clear as crystal 
runs down the middle of the village 
street, gnd watercress grows in pro- 
fusion in it, Rustic bridges cross the 
stream and lead up to the cottage 
gardens. Further broad expanses of 
watercress beds lie beyond the cot- 
tages, and the occupants make a live 
ing from whtercress. 


cnx ieee telenianeiialia 
Not What He Meant 

To attract the custom of the for- 
eigner, Japanese tradesmen often 
put up signs in what they consider to 
be idiomatic English. Such signs con-. 
tain amusing mistakes. One of the 
funniest is that exhibited by.a Jap- 
anese baker in Tokio; it reads: 

“A, Kashinuru, Biggest Loafer In 
Tokio.” 


season, and the three fine vessels of the Canadian Pacific fleet on these 
waters, 8.8. Assinibola, 8.8. Keewatin and 8.8. Manitoba, are now at the 
disposal of the public. Travellers wishing to vary the railway trip between 
Toronto and Winnipeg, are now able to make a pleasant change by taking 
ship at-Port McNicoll and passing through Lakes Huron and Superior, via 


Sault Ste. Marle, to Port Arthur and Fort William. At the latter point they | * 44: 


tranship to the Canadian Pacific trans-continental train and continue their 
journey to Winnipeg and the coast. Lay-out shows §.58. Assinibola, a 
vessel of 3,880 tons, and having accommodation for 260 first“class passen- 
gers, and sketchman of Great '.akes route. 


the fight against disease and dirt. 


A Navajo squaw would not think of 
@ perfect rug, for tradition 
says that blindness would follow such 


wae diet 2 ne oak es cates 


fine Czecho-Slovakia’s output of coal this morning?" 


last year. was one of the greatest in 
the country’s history. 


“Because I wasn't there.” — Mon- 
stique, Charleroi. 


ee * 


. « 


THE REDCLIFF REVIEW THURSDAY, JULY 24th, 1980 


The Redcliff Review —srer of “The al 
—_—— ; gress 0 zapor 


toned Peers Tharsday | part as follows: 
At the Review office, Seeond Street, 
i Redeliff, Alberta 


SUPSCRIPTION RATES. 

{n Canada and Great Britain $2.00 | assure the workers adequate pro | 
a sees x 5 : : 

United States $2.50) tection against the evils of 

|}employment and invalidity. 


which says in 


themselves to take measures 


Advertising Rates furnished on 
Application 


Bd. L. Stone, Editor and Prop 
a 
THURSDAY, JULY 24th, 1930 
Liberal Policy is 
Hard on Farmers | dominion Hon. 2. B. Bennet, lead | 
ler of the 
| realizing the seriousness of the | 
{unemployment situation has ple | 
|dged himself that when returned 
to power he will, if 
call a special session of parliam 
ent, to deal especially w.th the | 
unemployment question, ' 
This should be a geod hint to | 


policies have produced so. much 


prosperity , that 


the pledge of its party.” | 

| 

In his speeches throughout the | 

ie Conservative party. | 

Dairy and Sheep Men Suffer 
Frotn Liberal Treaties. 


i ‘ ecessary 
It looks now as theugh it re- nec ’ 


quired a general election ‘to a- 
Waken pravie farmers up to the 
realization of just what the  in- 
iquitous trade treaties entered | Labor throughout Canada as ti | 
into. with Australia and New| how they should cast ihere vote | 
vealand by the k.ng Liberal gov-|in the election on the 28th of this 
te ecatcalt fia meant and in mean-|month.. Vote for Blackstock, 
ing to'them. Mr. Bennett’s representative 
,uwese treaties coniing sg soon| this constituency. 
aitc, prairie farmers were We- 
ginning to roliow scientific and 


in | 


tt 


Conservative Party 


eoonulie advice by going more 4 
MLO Lije WUXed Las litle iidus ¢, The Friend ot Labor} 
and breancuing out. nto some- pat es 


Laing Mivre than just grain grow 
1, save been most discourag- 


For a number of years” past | 
Liberal politicians and newspap- | 
ing and disappointing, since they | ers have been tying to make the 
liave been the means of robling 
tius class of farmers of much ot 
tue truits of their labors, by un- 
‘faw competition through these 
unreasonable and one-sided treat 
ies. ‘Lhose who are being effec- 
ted most by these treaties  are| Would be a good idea for to re- 
farmers who, at considerable| fresh our memory by reviewing 
_ initial expense, have, gone into}some of the things which the, 
the Sheep business and- dairying | Conservative party has done in 
industry; ; ihe interests of Labor and to eon 
importations of New Zealand) vast them with the record of | 
butter inte Canada from January | the Liberal party. 
to May of this year amounted to} what the Conservative Party 
28,792,292 pounds This amount Has Done For Labor. 
displaced the outnnt of 151,538) 1¢ has made Trade Unions 
Canadian Cows owned by Candd-} jega} RE 
ian farmers. At the present 
time two British freighters are fo 
en route to Halifax from New 
Zealand with ten million pounds 
of putter, or the product of an. bcs diiedvebieedt miltaneiiiin:: 
other 52,632 Caaadian Cows. wale Adu - vi eu nie age 
-ihe result of these large im-| !t established a fund of $25, 
portations is that prairie farm- 900,000 f or the building of mod- 
ers are this year getting only erately priced houses for workers 
about half as much for their but-| It established nation-wide em- 
ter fat as they did before the] ployment bureacs, 
Liberal government made the 
treaty with New Zealand. 

A similar treaty with Austral-| It first gave consideration . to 
ia has played havoe with western|Old Age Pensions, and at the 
sheep ranchers in both the wool|same time urged investigation 
and mutton market. of unemployment and_ sickness 

The unfortunate part of both | insurance, 
these treaties is that nobody in| It bound Canada to the eight 
Canada benefits by them, not|h ur working day and the six day 
even the consumer who in paying | working week. 
just as much for butter and mut-| ]t made ‘available over 1,800, 
ton as he ever did. Only the|000 for relief during the 1920- 
New Zealand dairy farmers and | 91 unemployment crisis. 
the Australian sheep farmer ben 
efit by them at the Expense of 
Canada. es 

teffering to these treaties 
Hon. R, B. Bennett, Conservat- 
ive leader, said: 

“If it means that we are to 
admit free into our markets em-| 
pire goods in competition with 
our own, without secyring a real | 

enefit for ourselves, and with- 
out obtaining a prefered place in 
their markets for our products | 
then I oppose itas did Macdonald | 
for it is not good for Canada.” 

Vote for Mr, Blackstock, who 
will support Mr, Bennet in his 
efforts to “Give Canada a 
chance.” | 


public believe that the Conser- 
vative party was the 
Capital and showed ‘no 
in Labor. 


freind: of 
interest | 


Now that an election is on it) 


It granted $1,000,000 a 
r technieal education to 
workers. 

It granted $1,000,000 a 


year | 


ae 


year 


It took a cabinet minister from 
the trades unions. ‘ | 


It gave -20,000,000 
way construction. 
What the Liberals Have ;Done 

: for Labor. 

They stopped the grants for 
technical and. agriculturals educ- | 
ation, for buiding cheap homes | 


for high- 


| 
{ 
| 


DENOMINATION 
PAYABL 


Of Special Interest | 
To Canadian Labor 
The Review this week’ is in| HON. R. G, ‘REID, 


receipt uf a circular letter from |] ’°Yinl#! Treasrer 
W.'T, Burford, secretary treas- 


“scenery, 


ES Demand 
‘sy Savings Certificates 


$5.00 TO $10,000.00 
ON DEMAND 


Por Murther Particulars write or apply to 


PARLIAMENT BUILDINGS, EDMONTON, ALBERTA 


‘ 


jurer of “The All Canadian Con-| and for the highways: 


They carried out the Old Age| 


to) ations, i 


hey let thousands of Canad 


un-/ians go hungary last winter in-! 
|stead of arranging for 
The King government has, how} ary relief of 
ever, taken the stand that its the Conservatives did in 1920. 


temo! 
unemployment 
} 


The Conservative Party 


unemployment | either passed or originated eve 
|is not.a problem af .any  conse- (piece of social legislation on th 


quence, and has wholly ignored jstatutes of the Dominion. 


, 


Here and There 


au 


Pressure of business and growth 
of the Canadian Pacific. Telegraphs 
has necessitated. the appointment 
of an assistant general manager of 
the system, W. D. Neill, assistant 
manager, western lines, Winnipeg, 
having been promoted to the posi- 
tion. Other appointments result- 
ing from this are: W. M. Thomp- 
son, superintendent, Ontario Divi- 
sion, Toronto, to be assistant man- 
ager, western lines, Winnipeg; H. 
S. Ingram, superintendent, eastern 
division, Montreal, to be superin- 
tendent, Ontario division, Toronto; 
and W. 8S. Emery, chief operator, 
Montreal, to be superintendent, 
eastern division, Montreal. 


Fox Film Corporation during 
early July took sound récords of 
the wind in the pines, the music 
of the waterfalls and the rippling 
of streams around Banff Springs 
Hotel and into this boxed atmos- 
phere there will be placed actors 
and actresses who will be shown 
‘limbing mountains, walking by the 
side of lakes or canoeing on water- 
courses they have never seen. 


Beating the world’s record in 
passenger traffic operations, west- 
ern Canada came into the lime- 
light at the end of June with the 
1,252 mile continuous run from 
Fort William to Calgary performed 
by Canadian Pacific engine No. 
2808, of the Hil class. This loco- 
motive is one of several now in 
service and under construction for 
the railway and are the latest type 
of passenger engine. 


Carrying nearly a hundred tour- 
ists organized by the University of 
Montreal, a special Canadian Paci- 
fic train left Montreal July 6 for 
western Canada and the Pacific 
Coast. This tour is the sixth an- 
ual transcontinental trip under- 
taken and will last for three weeks 
The richest industrial, agricultural 
and commercial districts of Can- 
ada,eas well as the most beautiful 


including the Rocky 
Mountains, will be visited. 
With a five-pound trout taken 


himself and a four-pounder landed 
by his son, in the cateh, Arthur C. 
Roche, of Melrose, Mass., has just 
concluded a ten-day fishing trip 


|Pensions scheme half-way, but | 
“The Liberal party at its nat-|sidestepped unemployment 
ional convention in 1919, pledged, sickness insurance recommend- 


and! 


down the Cain's River, New Bruns- , 


wick. He said he had never hea rd 
of waters where there were. so 
many trout as tn Cain's River. 


A total of over $87,000,000 is to 
spent this year on the construction 
and maintenance of roads throneh 
out Canada. Ontario has’ set pside 


+ $12,500,000 of which $10,000,000 for 
will. 


new construction; Quebec 
spend $11,000,000 for extending, im- 
proving and maintaining the 
vincial system of reads 
will- expend $10,000,000; 
rie Provinces, — $15,000.000 and 
British) Columbia, $8,590,000. rep 
resenting a total of $87,000,000 
spent by provincial governments 


pre 
Maritiines 
the Prati 


The old gentleman, Father Time 
often regarded as 
lentiess, thas had 
him by the plant breeders at the 
Government Central Experimental 
Farm at -Ottawns I'wo -crops of 
grain are now grown there In each 


omewhat re 
one put over 


year one*in the or 1d the other 
im greenhouses t infty lighted 
w eloctole nirs Nie} have 


ihstituios 


pave j be Mood s for 


is Hyd 


Total production of maple syrup 
in Canada for 1930 was 2.185 479 
gallons valued at $3 869,107, and 
of ma,.e sugar 208.276 pounds, 
valued at $1,381,515. Average mar- 
ket price of maple syrup was $1.77 
a gallon, and of ‘maple sugar 17 
cents a pound The Province of 
Quebec was the largest producer 
and balance came from Ontario, 
Nova Bcotia and New Brunswick. 


ONE ROAD TO INDEPENDENCE 
Alberta 4 Per c. 


W. V. NEWSON 
Deputy Prov, Treasurer 


* 


The Lure of the Maritimes 


makers from all parts of eastern 
Canada and United States.* Their 
many sea-side resorts; quaint and 
beautiful little villages and snug 
towns dotted along: the Bay of 
Fundy have a special attraction 
for those who wish to combine 
comfort with scenic beauty; golf 


with fishing and sailing; and the 
whole with modern and direct 
transportation, 

St. Andrews-by-the-sea with its 
well known and excellent Algon- 
quin Hotel. There, as at its more 
famous namesake in Scotland, is 
to be found one of the outstanding 
18-hole golf courses in Eastern 
’ Canada where many a hard-fought 

he Maritimes hold a proud and] championship has been decided. 

awell-merited place in tourist Again, take Digby on the Bay 
popularity as well as being a} of Fundy. — Set in some of the 
favorite territory for holiday-| most beautiful, old-world scenery 


and a wide variety of other sports | 


in Canada, the Pines, recently 
opened hostelry, offers a wide 
range of entertainment including 
tennis, golf, sailing, fishing, hik- 
ing, horseback riding, motoring, 
swimming either in the sea or in 
the salt water pool with plate, 
lass. windscreens and promenade 
or spectators nestling under the ~ 
veranda of the hotel. Good mot- 
oring roads give access to scores 
of quaint little bare some . of 
them, in the Evangeline country 
scenes of historic incident and 
tragedy. Here too, the modern 
autoist will often meet the old- 
world ox wain taking its leisurely 
way down the country road. 

out shows hand-spring dive in 
the Pines Hotel pool; E 
country showi church and 
statue at Grand Pre; and section 
of course at St. Andrews. . 


~ AQUATIC SPORTS 


' 


takes: place on July 


ufacturer and not dictated by 
iency. 


ent unemployment situation. 


Mr. Blackstock says: 


VOTE FOR 
G. M. BLACKSTOCK 


The Conservative Candidate in This Con- 
stituency in the Federal Election which 


Mr. Blackstock Stands For: 


Canada first and Canada within the Empire. 
A stable fiscal policy suited to the needs of the far- 
mer, the rancher, and the artisan, and the man- 


Measures to Stimulate internal trade and proper 
development of our export trade. 
Immediate and vigorous measures to relieve the pres- 


| “For my part | pledge my whole 
ll hearted support towards the completion of the Hanna 
li branch of the Candian National Railway into Redcliff. 


). Mark Your X For Blackstock 


Published by the Redcliff Conservative Association 


At The Swimming Pool Next Wednesday — 


28th 


political expend- 


_ Bhe admitted. 


What many people call indigestion 
very often means excess acid in the 
stomach. The stomach nerves have 
been over-stimulated, and food sours. 
The corrective ts an alkali, which meu- 
tralizes acids instantly. And the best 
alkali known to medical science is 
Phillips’ Milk of Magnesia, It haf*re- 
mained the standard with physicians 
in the 50 years since its invention. 

One spoonful of this harmiess, 


cotter et 


SILVER 
RIBBONS 


- BY— ., 
CHRISTINE WHITING 
PARMENTER 


Copyright 1929 

OUACHTRADAREDERPOUECHSCORUSURORONDLEDICONEAIEEDSS: 

CHAPTER XV. 

‘Dinner is served, ladies and 
gents,” responded Charmian; while 
the doctor, throwing her an apprecia- 
tive smile, arose, and with the good 
manners Grandma had noticed on his 
arrival, offered his arm to the old 
lady. 

School opened on the fifth of Sep- 
tember. Charmian was up early that 
morning, but when she came down- 
stairs she found that her boarder had 
been earlier still. The fire was burn- 
ing brightly and the table set. 

“Hello, Miss Schoolma’am,” he 
greeted her. “Thought you might be 
in a fluster this morning, and like an 
early start. But you needn't feel too 


PUMA CEASELEESORNLERAERESEOEOOC ET OEOOEE: 


rushed because I'm going your way | 


right after breakfast and can give 
you a lift.” 

“I don’t believe you,” said Char- 
mian severely. “I think you're just 
saying so to save me the walk.” | 

“Didn't you hear the telephone ring 
at six o'clock?” he demanded in an 


injured tone. “Believe it or not, it 


was a bona fide call in your direction. 
Say! what can I do next? I'd have 
started the coffee, but I knew you'd 
suspect it wasn't right.” 

Charmian laugted. 

“You've found me out. No one’s 
ever allowed to make my coffee. You 
may get ‘the butter and cream out of 

’ the ice box, and then I’d appreciate 
your room more than your company. 
I’m excited, and likely to do some 
crazy thing if you divert me.” 

“Shall you be home at noon to se 
-to Grandma?" f : 

John Carter had begun taking his 
dinners at the hotel, 

_ them even more than Charmian sus- 
pected. Her face sobered at his ques- 
tion, 

“That's the one cloud in my sky,” 

“I really can’t get 
back; and though I’ll leave every- 
thing ready in the kitchen, I hate to 
have her fussing around alone.” 

The doctor looked thoughtfully out 
of the window. He was to all appear- 
ances watching the Merry'’s Gyppy 
investigate an invisible mouse in the 
wood pile, but when he turned he 
said: 

“Look here, Charmian, why not let 

me come in at noon and help? We 

«an eat here in the kitchen, and it 

would be less lonely for Grandma, 
wouldn’t it? You can leave things 
half ready, and I'll do the rest. Of 
course there'll be days when I can’t 
get here; but it would be, better than 


‘having her eat every noon meal | 


alone. On Saturdays and Sundays I'll 


‘USES PINKHAM 
MEDICINES 


Praises Vegetable 
Compound, Blood 
Medicine and Liver Pills 


. Birehtown, Quebec—“‘1 live 13 miles 

from town on a farm, with all my home 
| ——-— duties and churn- 

’ 

| 


ing to attend to, 
At the Change of 
Life, I became ner- 
vous and 


m. 
alee taken the 
the i 


When Pain 


Comes 


and disliked | 


“i rected Grandma, “and even @ strang- 


‘ Uj 


> 


tasteless alkall in water will neutral- 
ize instantly many times as much 
acid, and ‘the symptoms disappear at 
once. You will never use crude meth- 
ods when once you learn thé efficiency 
of this, Go get a small bottle to try. 
Be sure to get the genuine Phillips 
Milk of Magnesia prescribed by physi- 
cians for 50 years in correcting ex- | 
cess acids, Each bottle contains full | 
directions—any drugstore.. 


go to the hotel, of course,”’ he added. | 

“I'm. trying to lighten your work, you 

know, not make it harder.” 

The girl looked up, a grateful smile 
shining in her eyes and widening the 
pretty curve of her lips. 

“What a trump you are!” 

He laughed. ; 

“Does that Mean that you approve 
of my suggestion?” 

“It does if—Would it be fair to 
you?" she broke off suddenly. 

“Fair! You'd think it fair if you 
knew how I detest that hotel table! 
You've spoiled me completely, serv- 
| ing my meals as daintily as if I were 
| an invalid. Anyhow, I like fussing 
| ‘round a kitchen. Sometimes I think 
I'd have been more of a success as a | 
chef than as a doctor.” | 

“Well,” said the girl, “if you'll ac- | 
cept your lunch in payment for your | 
services—” 

“Charmian Davis, are you a| 
moron?” He faced her, looking 80 | 
belligrent that she had to smile. ‘I | 
pay a dollar every day at that miser- 
| able joint of a hotel, and you're sug- 

gesting—" 

“But you don't cook your own) 
lunch there,” she broke in seriously. 

“And I shan't here. I'll merely 
warm up the stuff you leave, and 
keep . that precious little old lady | 
from being lonely. And you ask me 
to accept food in payment. I’m sur- 
prised!” 

“But—" 

“There's no ‘but’ about it. Look | 

here!" The doctor indulged in a bit 
of lightning calculation, and contin- 
ued: “We'll split the difference if it 
makes you happier. I'm not likely to 
devour m@re than fifty cents’ worth 
of provisions, I'll pay you that, do 
any necessary cooking, and, when I 
| don't have to hurry off (and unless 
my practice increases surprisingly | 
| there’s no danger!), I'll wash | 
dishes. Thus I'll be saving fifty cents | 
; @ day, which means a lot to me, and 
you—” 
‘ “And I shall feel like a different 
girl,” ended Charmian as he hesitat- 
ed. “Réally, I've dreaded leaving 
Grandma alone so much. I don't 
know how to thank you, Doctor.” 

“You can do so by dropping that 
ridiculous habit of addressing me as 
Doctor. I'm forgetting that I possess 
| a Christian name, And I’ve had the | 
cheek to call you Charmian for | 
weeks,” . 

“Every one in Wickfield calls me 
Charmian,” she responded, “I rather 
| expect to be addressed that way by 
| some of my pupils! If you had been 
| an ordinary Mister—well, I shouldn’t 
have kept that up, of course; but 
Doctor, minus the Carter, has an in- 
formal sound, you know. However, 
T'll reform at once, though I've no 
doubt Grandma will consider me un- 
maidenly.” 

She laughed—broke an egg into a 
blue bowl, and added: “Clear out, 
John. It’s beyond my powers to con- 
| verse intelligently with a man while 
I get his breakfast.” 

Grandma, when told of the new 
plan, brightened visibly. 

“I don't mind owning now that I’ve 
sort of dreaded my dinners,” she ad- 
mitted.” “Somehow the days seem 
long with no one to speak to, though 
I've no doubt the neighbors will drop 
in more often knowing that you're 
not here, dearie. Some days, when 
there's a lot of excitement in the 
street, the time goes quick enough; 
but it'll be something to look for- 
ward to having the doctor come home 
at noon.” 

“Thanks,” he said, smiling at her 
across the table. “I expect we'll be a 
regular Darby and Joan before the 
winter's over!” 

“No reason why we shouldn't,” re- 
plied Grandma, as she dipped a toast 
crust in her coffee. “I don't know any 
young man I'd rather have around, 
even Jimmy Bennett, and I'm as fond > 
of Jim as if he was my own grand- 
son, There are even times when I 
hope he will be; but there's no 


telling.” 
“Why, Grandma Davis!" cried 
Charmian, “Whoever heard such 


talk—-and before a stranger!” 
“The doctor isn't a stranger,” cor- 


, 


| sciatica, 


er would see that Jimmy Bennett 


thinks the world of you, wouldn't 
they, Doctor?” 
John Carter, who was enjoying 


Charmian’s confusion, replied in the 
affirmative, and Grandma said: “The 
only drawback to Jimmy is his moth- 
er. She's a good woman, but terribly 
exacting, and she expects her boy to 
do just what she says. There are 
times when I wonder why he doesn’t 
kick over the traces and rebel; but 
he’s a good son, and he sees the 
funny side of things, too, arid that 
makes hin\ intéresting. Many's the 
time he’s run in to tell,me a funny 
stoty—times ‘when he knew Char- 
mian wasn’t home, and that proves 
that he’s got a kind heart. But’ he's 
not poetic, like Charmian,¢and I've 
sometimes wondered—” 

“Really,” broke in Charmfan, aris- 

‘Really,’ broike in Charmian, aris- 
ing, “though I know it’s not polite to 
interrupt, I must. -start fixing your 
lunch, Grandma, or be late to school 


on my first morning. You and the | 


doctor can take your time, but—" 
She left the room, her sentence un- 
finished, and Grandma said: “I guess 
maybe she didn’t want me to talk 
about her and Jimmy; and she's ex- 
cited, too, beginning school and all. 
You go out, sonny and tell her not to 
bother with much of a meal for us 
today. We'll eat the left-overs.” 
Charmian returned that afternoon, 
tired but elated. Things had gone 


well; and she had met Doctor Howe | 
/.on the way. back, and ridden in with 


him. 

“Between the two doctors I shan't 
get the exercise I need,” she said to 
Grandma. “I mustn’t let myself get 


| fat as I get old.” 


“Fat!” snorted the old lady. ‘The 
Davises don’t put on flesh, child. 
They’re apt to be lean and spare in 
their old age;.and your mother's peo- 
ple were the same. You needn't worry 
about getting fleshy like Lizzie 
Baker. She eats too much, and she 
never walks if she can sit. 

“Well, dearie, I’m glad things went 
all right on your first day. And I got 


| along real well myself. Lizzie Baker 


ran over to borrow some vinegar 
(she was making salad dressing); and 
Mrs. Merry. stopped in for a spool of 
“cotton and stayed an hour. The doc- 
tor warmed up things real tasty, and 
we had as nice a dinner as I ever ate. 
He had another call just as he finish- 
ed doing up the dishes; and there’s 
been a patient-at the office, too. He’s 
feeling real encouraged. He says if 
things continue to go on this way 
he'll be getting him a wife. I dunno 
who he'll find ‘round Wickfield un- 
less it's you, dearie, and I wouldn't 
amind if it was. He's got the makings 
of a good husband.” 

Charmian sat down and laughed.’ 

“You seem bound to marry me to 
some one, Grandma. Are you 
ashamed of an old maid grand- 
daughter? In these days a girl 
thinks twice before she takes on the 
cares of matrimony,” 


The Many-Purpose Oil. — Both in 


the-house and. stable there are scores. 


of uses for Dr, Thomas’ Eclectric 
Oil. Use it for cuts, bruises, burns, 
scalds, the pains of rheumatism and 
sore throat and chest. 
Horses are liable very largely to sim- 
ilar ailments and mishaps as afflict 
mankind, and are equally amenable 
to the healing influence of this fine 


|old remedy which has made thou- 


sands. of firm ‘friends during the past 
fifty years. 


Indications Point That Way 

I don’t think the boss likes me any 
too well, 

He told me last week I made a 
mistake in leaving college even if I 
did graduate. 

He refused to give me a raise every 
time I asked, : 

He advertised for a man to take 
any place. 

He took my _ stenographer 
lunch, 

He gave me two week's notice. 

He introduced me to my successor. 


to 


The first man who set out to dis- 
cover the date of the earth's birth- 
day was Halley, the astronomer. 


‘Smothering Spells 
Couldn’t Walk Far 


Gasped For Breath 


Mrs. T. W. Roth, Kelowna, B.C,, 
writes:—“For over a year I was 
troubled with smothering spells, and 


|it was impossible for me to walk, 


even a short distance, on account of 
having to gasp for breath, 
“ A friend told me to try 


which I did, and in a short time I 
felt much better. 
“I can now recommend them to 
everyone.” 3 
Price, 50c. a box at all druggists 


ZAM:‘BUK 


Ulcers & Bad Legs 


Ointment $0¢ 0 


Me 


Many Openings In West 


Business Opportunities In Good 
Towns Along National Railways 
|, According to the latest “Business 
Opportunity” lst issued by the Col- 
|onization Department of the Cana- 
| dian National ‘Railway, 
many openings in’ Western Canada, 
more ,or less attractive for profes- 
| sional men, store keepers, mechanics 
and others who are ambitious to get 
| into business. Towns, large and small, 
| along Canadian National | lines 
tween Lake Superior and the Pacific 
Coast, contribute to the listings. 
| Doctors are in the greatest demand, 


| no fewer than 39 places represented 
believing that they can support one, 
and in some cases it is suggested the 
practitioner might do well if he had 
|his own drug store. Twenty-one 
places would like to have a druggist 
join their respective communities. 
Several dentists are also wanted. 
There are opportunities for a few 
hotels, restaurants and rooming and 
boarding houses, and twenty-one 
communities are asking for a baker 
and confectioner. Old “Dobbin” is 
evidently still doing business, for 
twenty-six openings for blacksmiths 
and several for veterinary surgeons 
are listed. In a few cases. it is neces- 
sary that the blacksmith should be 
somewhat of a motor mechanic as 
the two trades are very often com- 
‘| bined in small towns. Thirty-three 
places want a garage, and in some of 
these cases the motor engineer would 
have to understand tractor and gen- 
eral repairing. Harness makers and 
shoe repairers to the number of nine- 
teen could be located, and the people 
of eight villages want to doll up for 
they want a tailor, chiefly for clean- 


shops with pool rooms in connection 
are required. That the country is 
progressing is indicated by thirty-one 
requests for banks and twenty-nine 
for flour and grist mills. The devel- 
opment of the dairying business in 
certain localities is shown by the list- 
ing of thirty-three creameries, in five 
cases with cheese factories combined. 
There are also openings for a num- 
ber of butchers, general stores, hard- 
ware stores, and many other lines 
from hairdressers to saw mills, Sev- 
eral of the large centres invite 
correspondence regarding industrial 
propositions. h 

During the past few years many 
business men have found good loca- 
tions through the Canadian National 
Railways’ Business Opportunity list; 
and apparently there are still many 
promising openings. in all the prov- 
inces. New towns being placed on the 
map by railway construction are also 
offering chances for enterprising men 
to get in on the ground floor, 


Believe It Or Not 


Berlin University Professors Claim 
German Fish Can Read 

German fish have been taught to 
read their German ‘A B C, according 
to professors in a Berlin university. 
The swimmers were found to. be 
bright pupils. First they were taught 
to distinguish colors by placing food 
in variously colored bags. The fish 
learned to swim to the bag -contain- 
ing their favourite food and to open 
it by pulling a string. The savants 
then attached letters of the alphabet 
to bags, which were all of the same 
color, Eventually the fish were able 
to pick out the correct bag by the 
letter, and even to distinguish the let- 
ter “R"” from “B.”" 


Worked It Right 

Penitent: “I have stolen a fat goose 
from a poultry yard!” 

Priest: ‘That. is very wrong.” 

Penitent: “Would you like to aa- 
cept it, father?" 

Priest: “Certainly I will not re- 
ceive stolen goods—return it to the 
man from whom you stole it.” 

Penitent: “But I have offered it to 
him and he won't have it.” 

Priest: “In that case you may keep 
{t yourself.” 

Penitent: “Thank you, father.” 

The priest arrived home to find one 
of his own geese stolen, 

Imports of motor vehicles into 
China last year were more than 60 
per cent, greater than in the prev- 
fous 12 months. 

The Berlin, Germany, police de- 
partment has been given an outdoor 
gymnasium which 100 men can use 
at a time. 


Baby bears are almost invariably 
born in the winter. 


The metal caesium is soft enough 


and dealers, or mailed direct on re- | to be cut with a knife. 


ceipt of price by The T. Milburn Co., 
Limited, Toronto, Ont. 


Use Minard’s for KRheounatism. 


be- | 


ing ahd pressing. Thirty barber: 


Relic Of Colonial Days 
Victoria Will Preserve Iron House 
Erected Seventy Years Ago 

When sappers of the Royal Engin- 


errs came to British Columbia in 
1858, to build roads in the new Bri- 


| tish colony, they bullt their houses | 


| of iron. The engineers either were not 
| conversant with the durability of the 
| country's lumber or elsé they desired 
additional protection from Indian 
raiders. 

The old iron houses were forgotten 
years ago, and it was thought that 


| the last’ of them had been removed | 
there are’ 


until workmen engaged in. clearing 
| away'déld buildings to make room for 
| additions to the government buildings 
at Victoria, discovered the tron struc- 
ture which had served as a dwelling 
| 70 years ago. Sills under the butld- 
ing were found to be in good condi- 
; ton. They were of timber brought 
out from England. 

Provincial government  authort- 
ties upon learning the history of the 
iron house, ordered it placed upon 
& new foundation and to be pre- 
| Served as @ relic of old colonial days. 

The sturdy child—the bright, act+ 
ive little chap is the one everybody 
loves. It is only the sickly, fretful 
child who is not attractive. It is the 
birthright of every child to be sturdy 
and well—to be able to make every- 
one admire him. Therefore, mothers, 
if- yours is not attractive it’s your. 
fault, not his. He must be alling 
jand it is up to you to see that he 
gets relief—that he Is given a medi- 
cine that will quickly make him well 
and keep him well. 

Baby’s Own Tablets are especially 
designed for infants and young chil- 
dren. There ts nothing to equal them 
for correcting the irregularities of 
the stomach and bowels—the cause 
of most of the ills from which little 
ones suffer. The Tablets are sold 
by medicine dealers or by mail at 25 


cents a box from The Dr. Williams’ 
Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. 


Cleaning British Library 

Another seasonable observance is 
the beginning of the great spring- 
clean at the British Museum Library. 
The regular dusting brigade on the 
library staff is reinforced for the oc- 
casion by a band of outside special- 
ists, so that in all about eighty men 
are kept busy. The dusting of books 
goes on systematically, of course, 
from January 1 to December 31. 

Persian Balm is. alluringly fra- 
grant. Adds a charming refinement 
to the most finished appearance. 
Creates and preserves complexions of 
surpassing loveliness and texture. 
Softens and whitens the hands, Cools 
and dispels all irritation caused by 
weather conditions, Swiftly absorbed 
by the tissues leaving never a vestige 
of stickiness. A peerless toilet re- 
quisite. Invaluable to all women who 
care for elegance and distinction. . 


Teacher: “‘What is an island?” 

Bright Boy: “A place where the 
bottom of the sea sticks up through 
the water.” 


| 


“Skinny! | Gained 
11 Lhs. in 8 Weeks 
and Boy Friend”’ 


“After trying several 


tonics tried Ironiz6d 
Yeast. In 8 weeks 
gained 11 Ibs. new 


complexion, round limbs; 

best of all a boy friend.” 

—§. M. Salino, 
Men and women are amazed at 
| Fain of 5 to 15 Ibs. in 8 weeks. Ugly 
| hollows vanish. Bony limba round 
out, Sallow, blemished skin gets 
| cleat. and rosy like magic. Nerydus- 
tress, indigestion, constipation  dis- 
| appear overnight. Sountl sleep. New 
| pep from very first day. : 

Two great tonics in one 
weight-building Malt Yeast and 
strengthening Iron. Pleasant little 
tablets. Far stronger than unmedi- 
cated yeast. Results in % time. No 
yeasty taste, no gas. 

Don't go round “skinny,” ugly, un- 
attractive. Get Ironized Yeast from 
| druggist today. Feel great tomor- 
row. Money back from manufac- 
turer if not delighted with results. 


special 


Little Helps For This Week 


“Though He slay me, yet will I 
trust In Him.’’—Job 138, 15. 


Within the 
hand 


slender chalice’ of the 


ni 
Hold fast what I give thee, and 
drop down , 
The fringes of those tender: flowers 
‘ blue, 
Thy wondering eyes; nor question, 
nor withstand 
What I may give. Perchance my love 
hath planned 
Some sweet surprise or test if 
thou be true; 
What if it be a sprig of bitter rue, 
| A strange swift summons‘to an 
unknown land, 
A hurting thorn, a cross? rare gifts 
| I know 
For love to bring; but woulds’t 
thou. trust me still? 
Quick, dear, thine answer! “T should 
trust until 
The hidden meaning in thy gift 
should show." 
Ah, sweet, when God sends just such 
gifts to thee 1 
Canst thou not answer Him as thou 
dost me? 


We should see not only the hand of 
| God, but the hand of our Heavenly 
| Father, full of mercy and _ loving- 
kindness in all that befalls us. We 
should believe it to be best for us, 
because it is His will, | 

— George W. Bethune. 


Minard’s Drives Away the Headache. 


Valuable Insect Destroyer 
The value of the Hungarian part- 
ridge as a destroyer of insects and 
veeds appears to have been establish- 
ed in Prince -Edward Island, and 
twelve: pairs have just been import- 
ed under the auspices of the Provin- 

cial Department of Agriculture. 


Willum (reading poster): ‘Who be 
this ‘ere Hoover, Jarge?” 

Jarge: ‘Whol, 'e be the feller what 
built the Vacuum at Rome!” | 


terial such 


Inexpen 


remodel or 
Gy 
a 


GYPSUM, 


Winnipeg 


Be Certain of 
SAFETY © 
Build with Gyproc 


pee can hurl your 
home to destruction 
unless a fire-resistant ma-- 


Ivory coloured Gyproc 
Wallboard is used in its 
construction, 


nent, easy to apply, Gyp- 
roc Wallboar 
‘burn, \t is exactly whac 
you want for fire-safe 
walls, ceilings and par- 
titions when you build, 


Ask your dealer today 
for full information on 


modelling with Gyproc.” 


ALABASTINE, CANADA, 
LIMITED 


TheNEW IVORY 


Y PROC 


Fireprool 
~~ wernaruencanannaaianamatas 


as the new 


sive, perma. 


does not 


pm //0 


repair, 


roc Wallboard or By) 
for interesting free y 
book, “Building and Re- iss 


LIME AND 


Manitoba 


Wallboard 


4 


THE REDCLITT REVIEW THURSDAY, JULY 24th, 1980 


SASL LALA AAIAL II POLE 


SARGON SARGON 


WE ARE NO STOCKED WITH SARGON 


And Sargon Suft Mass Pills 


A treatment designed to build up deficient, Metabolism 


And in restoring the haemoglobin of the blood to normal 


Stimulate the action of the Liver and Gall Bladder, 


and 
thereby, increase’ bodily vigoy and well being. ‘i 


Get Sargon at Your Local Drug 
Store | 


CECIL T. HALL Druggist 
Pa MME LUTE BE NLT 


. fot rs =) Conservative Leader 
nteresting — Favored Completion 
Local Items of Hanna Branch 
LOST— Between Redcliff and 


Medicine Hat on Saturday night For several 
a headlight for 1927 ford. car. 
Finder please leave same. with A. 


E. Tester and get reward. 


years past the 
completion of the Canadian Nat- 
ional branch Line into -Redcliff 
., has been a live issue in Redcliff 
+ * # and Medicine Hat as well as with 

;tarmers settled in the. territory 


Bricks Win from 4 throuch which this branch pass- 
Town Last Friday «: 


The completion of this branch 
line means so much to the indus- 
tries of Medicine Hat and Red- 
‘cliff and the employees of these 

The tie between the two town! centres that every effort was 
teams in theBennett Shield com-'| made by the combined forces of 
petition was settled last Friday | these two centres and the farm- 
evening when the Brick & Coal \ers, to get the Liberal govern- 


Take first Round in the Bennett 
Shield, 


team defeated the town by 2 goal ment to use its influence in have | 
‘to 1 in the third try to setfle the | jing the. branch finished. Fox KEETLEY JOHNSON 
question. inine long years these , efforts —for— 
The game was one of the best have been unavailing and noth-|; aomseass Fire, Sickness 
of this most exciting 0 ; ne hes been done to complete Ocean fcauauer Service 
The Bricks scored their first|/this much needed branch line. . ae 
goal in the first half but the se¢-' Liberal ministers and candidates | \\ os res oa eer! 3 


ond period was not long in prog-, aré now, on the eve 
ress when the town equalized. election promising all kinds 
’ From this on it was a battle roy-| branch lines. The inference is 
al until the Bricks were awarded | that the Liberal party is of the 
a penalty from which Kilner) op:nion that it is a seat for-them 
scored on a nicely placed shot land that they don’t need to build 
‘The only: cause for complaint |railroads here to get voted. 
came from the town team sup-! On the other hand we have the 


porters.who claimed the award- 
ing of a penalty was too severe 
- for what they claimed was an 
accident in the penalty area. 
However in this connection opin- 
ions différ, others claiming the 


handling of the ball was diliber-| — 


ate, 

Over enthusiasm was again 
the cause of two of those incid- 
ents which rather hinder than | 
help sports. 


—_——o- . 

A second drowning. accident 
occured in the River at Medicine 
Hat this season. Arthur Lay an 
18 year old lad of that City was 
drowned yesterday while bathing 
near the bridge. . The body has 
not yet been recovered. 


. - 
In Southern Italy 
were lest and over 1 million are 
homeless by an eafthqueke. 


i 


ee 


th 


WM. HENDERSON 

Issuer of 
Marriage Licenses 
FIRE INSURANCE 

Rent Collections Attended te 


Office at Residence 2nd St. 


Building Material 
And Mill Work 


We are Fully Stucked up || 


- With Material for Spring 
and Summer Repairs, 
Sereen Doors and Windows 

DOOR GLASS 


2,000 lives | 


AND WINDSHIELDS 

VERANDAS -GLASSED in |) 
The Gas City 

Planing Mills 


First St, ' Medicine Hat 


leader of the Conservative party 
who in 1929 when there was no 
election in sight, said in the 
house when the completion of 
this line was up for. discussion. 
*T trust that the management 


SPECIALS FOR 
Citizens of Redcliff on 


DRY CLEANING 


Ladies Hats $ 
Ladies Spr. Coats 
Ladies- Dresses 
Mens Hats 
Mens Spr. Coats $1.00 
Mens Suits $1.00 
Leave order at the Review 
Office or Phone 3773. 
City Dye Works 
Medicine. Hat 
CALL & DELIVER 


50. 
$1.00 
$1.00 
$ .75 


WE 


REDCLIFF DRAY 


AND ——— 


Feed Barn 


DRAYING, TEAMING 
CESSPOOL, WARK ? 
PROMPT ATTENTION 
and 
SATISFACTION 
GUARANTEED 


Garden Ploughing 
Make 


and 


Arrangements Now 


'W.H. NUSSEY 


PHONE 26 


' 
! 
4 
4 
' 
De ok es a 
5 ta 
j om rl ‘ 
| anu : athe 
Be y ch; Yar a 15 
|! and avoide disappointment. 


| will be pressed bythe minister 
Wy reconsider the question and 
| determine whether or not second 
|hand steel from the main line or 
lfrom some good branch lines 
| could not be found to complete 
| th at railway down at ‘least to 
| Redcliff, and running 
lrights into Medicine Hat could be 


} 


possibly 


jacquired. 

| "his is not a line on which you 
|can expt ot heavy steel'structure 
|U inder 


these 


circumstances it} | 


Cc h arch es 


ST. MARY’S CHURCH 


Celebration of Mass second and 
fourth Sunday of each month at 
|8: BO a. m. 


| Meat Market 


When in the city to do 
some shopping, and when it 
comes to Meat just call at 
our store and get the Best 
there is’ Wealways have 
a choice line of ' , 


| GARAGE TAXI | 


Phone 32 
Ready For Business 
All Hours Day Or Night 


Trips May Be Arranged 
J. L. WRIGHT 
Prop. 


| Special 


\, :ORDON MEMORIAL UNITED | | 


CHURCH | Lang Bros, 


FRESH AND CURED 
MEATS 
FISH AND POULTRY: 


Ss 


Ltd. 


seems to me that a bridge mig ht | 
const? the Red} 

i Déey -- even though it might not | 
lbe the last worl in railway con 
| struction with second-hand stee! 
liaid on the grade that extend: 
uth from Steveville to Redcliff 
so that the railway which the 
ls settlers along ‘the line .expected | 


weted across: 


; On, 


Wher asked on the eve of the 


lelection what stand he would tak | 


}on the completion of the Hanna 
| bre ‘anch line Mr, Bennett said in 
leffect yqu have my stand record- 

ed in Hansard andl am_ still of 
the same opinion. The 
quotation is from Hansard. 


above 


a ee 


CARD. OF *THANKS 
Treasured memores of a dear 
| Husband and Father, Charles FE. | 


Oakland, who died in Col. Belcher | 


Hospital, Calgary on July 27th 
924. 
“Not one day, but every 
Remembered. ef 
From his loving Wife & Sons, 


Edward and David. 


of general | sce Sinica 
of 


Brick Work, Plastering. 
Stucco and Cement Work 


All Work Guaranteed and 


Promptly Attended to. 
A. E, TESTER REDCLIFF 


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Now is the Time To 


Arrange For 


Spring Cleaning 

We are well prepared to 
attend to all your Wants for 
Spring Cleaning, with a full’ 
Stock of: 


PAINTS, VARNISHES, 
CALSOMINE, BRUSHES 
GLASS, PUTTY, 
SCREEN DOORS. 


Everything you need 
Call and See Stock. 


A. Maskell 


our 


Oe eer meee: eevee vem rem a 


| Bedding 
Plants 


CELERY, CABBAGE 
TOMATOES & FLOWERS 


of all Varietie 


GERANIUMS 


From 2 ineh Pots 
15c Each, Per Doz 


$1.50 


Leave your orders early 


DOMINION GREENHOUSE 


| to be be built be carried to complet-! 


day 


Services as usual Sunday, — -. | 
ST, AMBROSE CHUCRH |! 

Rev. Maleolm Stewart, Vicar. 
Sunday, July 27th, 1930 

8.00 A, M. Holy Communion. 
9:45 A, M. Baptism. 

110.00 A.M. Sunday School. 

7.30 P. M. Evensong x 


‘With All The Trimmigs . 
' Our Prices Are Right. 
Fire Accident ' 


Give Us a Trial Order 
Life 


Central Meat Market 


BE. J. HUNT 
628 2nd St. 


Sickness 


| 
INSURANCE | 


651 2nd St. Medicine Hat 


Telephone 3554 


Medicine Hat 


CHURCH OF BRETHREN 
Rev. Ira M. Zeigler, Pastor 
| Services every Sunday, 
Sunday School 10:30 a, m. 
Morning service 11;30 
Evening Services at 8:00, 
|. ¢ ‘hotr practice every Thursday | 
Levening at 7:30, 
Everybody welcome. A spec- “DAMES AHOY” 
ial invitation is extended to those | 
who have no chur ch home or do 
not attend any Sunday School. 


————-1— 


DREAMLAND, Medicine Hat 
THURS. FRI, MON. TURS. and WED. 
‘ PERSONALITY” 


SAT. 
Glen Tryon & Otis Harlan 
in with 
Sally Star & Johnny: Arthur 
A Comedy Drama 
Campus Crushes 
Futurity & Whirl of society 


Tarzan the Tiger 


Live Ghosts 


{ 
| 
I 
! 
' 


| Advertise in the Review. 


—ESESESESSE EEE | 


FRANK BAIRD 


BARRISTER, SOLICITOR, | Papoae by Mail 


i ee 


NOTARY PUBLIC, etc 


\| Office Broadway. Phone 79 
1 REDCLIFF, ALBERTA 


J 


SAV a trip to town, Deposits sent 
by mail will receive careful and 
prompt atiention, and you will receive 
an immediate racanismcnten aisles of your 


A. E. WARD. M.D. 


deposit. 
LM: Cc: | 
"Siena | UMPERIAL BANK OF CONADA 
‘LOCKWOOD BLOCK Rhone 2 HEAD OFFICE 
| REDCLIFF a 
ja Tee yop a A. McKenzie, Manager. 
Billiard Parlor |! . GS oe 


Still Operating 


Will Take Place 
At Cameo Theatre 


instead of Cliff Hall 
as advertised in Notice of Poll 


I am continuing running 
the billiard parlor at the 
reav of McGimpsey’s barber 


shop. 


Make it a point of meet- 
ing your freinds here for 


a Friendly Game 
A. E. SMITH 


SD | 


' The Poll will be. open from 8 a. m. 
till 6 p. m. 


poLITickt WEETIEES 
In Cliff Hall, Redcliff 
Friday Evening, July 25th 


TO BE ADDRESSED BY 


G. M. BLACKSTOCK 


Conservative Candidate For This 


Constituency 


’ 


Come and Hear the Political Issues Discussed 


AND PRODUCE CO. | 
— | 


PS pa